I'm trying to slightly modify a wordpress template. At the moment a function returns a link to an article, I am trying to replace this link so that instead of diverting you to another page it just brings the article in and loads it.
To do this I need to reset the anchors href after the page has loaded.
This is the bit of code I am interested in:
<?php the_content( __('<img class="readmore" src="/images/readmore.png" title="poo"></img>', 'twentyten' ) ); ?>
returns:
<a class="more-link" href="http://henryprescott.com/undgraddissintro/#more-12">
<img title="poo" src="/images/readmore.png" class="readmore"></img></a>
However I want to modify this so a script runs instead of taking you to a new page.
I therefore tried to run this:
$(document).ready(function(){
$("a.more-link").css("href", "#");
alert($("a.more-link").css("href"));
}
It does nothing, and the alert returns "undefined".
Where am I going wrong, thanks!
Use attr() instead of css().
The css method is for getting or setting CSS properties (like margin, color, font-size, etc.). The attr method is for getting or setting HTML attributes, like href, src, etc.
You are trying to change the attribute with a CSS command, which is wrong.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("a.more-link").attr("href", "#");
alert($("a.more-link").attr("href"));
}
the css() if just for adding inline css, try attr() in this case
jQuery(document).ready(function(){
jQuery("a.more-link").attr("href", "#");
alert(jQuery("a.more-link").attr("href"));
return false;
}
the return false is to avoid the page reload. ;)
Related
so I have been having this problem I have a div with 2 buttons in my HTML
<div id="carosel">
<button class="navigation" id="nav-left"><</button>
<button class="navigation" id="nav-right">></button>
</div>
and in my jQuery code, I have this function
$("nav-left").hover(function() {
alert('something');
});
when I try from console sometimes it works. I have referenced the javascript file in the header correctly.
The problem is quite simple, you forgot a "#" initiative at the beginnging the selector, you should try run the following
$("#nav-left").hover(function() {
alert('something');
});
Two problems:
First, your selector should be #nav-left. jQuery uses css selectors, so you need to use the # to reference an element with an ID of nav-left. (Whereas you would use .nav-left if your element had a class of nav-left rather than an id)
Second, when you move from the console to your own file (or inline script), you will want to wrap your JavaScript in a
$(document).on('ready', function (){
<Your code here>
})
This will ensure that your DOM will have actually renderered before you try to manipulate it with jQuery.
Here is the code:
<span class='maincaptionsmall'>
Test
</span>
For some reasons of ajax and jquery codes in my page, I can't use HREF as Link, I mean, I can't use something like this following code:
<span class='maincaptionsmall'>Test</span>
So, How can i use jquery to get this css element maincaptionsmall and it will set it to href link ?
Even I can't use <div> too, I should use everything as <span>
Please give me an example that how to use jquery to set css element as href link.
Thanks in advance
CSS is not capable of doing such things. But JavaScript is! To change the href of an element first obtain the element:
var e = document.getElementById("elementid")
or
var e = document.getElementByClassName("elementclass")
Here are the basics on JavaScript selectors.
And then we can change the href property like so:
e.setAttribute("href", "http://google.com")
Good Luck!
You can open using JS/JQuery and CSS
Jquery has short simple code and is too fast too so I prefer that:-
Here is the Code :-
HTML
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.10.1.min.js"></script>
//Remember to add JQUERY on your page to make any jquery code work
<div id="example">Click Here</div>
JS
//UPDATED CODE:-
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#example").click(function () {
alert("K");
window.open('http://www.google.com/');
});
});
the Issue was that the function I gave you should be added under "$(document).ready(function(){"
Reg, "DIV or SPAN" u can use any tag, but give ID to that and whatever ID you are giving, mention the same in jQuery code too!
And Reg, JQUERY being called, please check on your page is there any other MAIN Jquery file being called? if there is already some other Jquery being called then this one is not required.
Please Check the updated Fiddle for your reference: http://jsfiddle.net/aasthatuteja/aPbje/
Let me know if this resolves you issue.
Enjoy!
I have this HTML:
Track Your Package »
Somebody on this site was able to provide me with a script to prefix the URL with the domain http://www.example.com/ Here's the script:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('a[onclick^="window.open(\'TrackPackage.asp"]').attr('onClick', $('a[onclick^="window.open(\'TrackPackage.asp"]').attr('onClick').replace("window.open('", "window.open('http://www.example.com/"));
});
However, I am having a little trouble with this:
The first issue is where there is multiple instances of the element. Here's a fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/VMmZx/
Instead of one anchor being signed with ID=4 and the other with ID=5 as intended, they're both being signed with ID=4.
The idea is, each window.open function should be prefixed with http://www.example.com however, the remainder of the URL should remain intact...
The second problem I'm encountering is when the element does not exist on a page, the remainder of the jQuery fails...
Here's another fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/VPf32/
The <a> should get the class foo, but since the element does not exist on the page, the jQuery does not execute.
Since the JavaScript is being included in the HTML template of the ASP.NET server, this can create many problems.
I hope I've been clear and you can help me. Thanks.
You can use .each() to iterate over each matching element and change them individually:
$('a[onclick^="window.open(\'TrackPackage.asp"]').each(function(index, element) {
element = $(element);
element.attr('onclick', element.attr('onclick').replace(/open\('/, 'open(\'http://www.example.com/'));
});
However, I don't think using links with a href of # and an onclick opening a window is as semantic as it could be. If possible, try changing the markup to this:
Track Your Package »
Now if someone is curious where it will lead them, the browser can show something useful in the status bar when you hover over it.
If you need to adjust the behavior further, add a class and bind for the click event. When they click, prevent the default action and open the window yourself, as you did before.
Why are you doing the click even inline like that? I would just output the links like:
Link Text
And then:
$('a[target=_blank]').click(function(){
var prefix = 'http://domain.com';
window.open(prefix + $(this).attr('href'));
});
EDIT: This isn't happening because of the ajax call. I changed it to use a value from a TinyMCE component for fun and I get the same thing.
content = tinyMCE.get('cComponent').getContent(); //content at this point is <p>test</p>
valueToDisplay = content;
If I do:
jQuery(selector).html(valueToDisplay);
I get:
<p><a xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">test</a></p>
Has anyone ever seen this before using Firefox 3.6.10 and jQuery 1.4.2, I am trying to change a link text using the result from a jQuery ajax call.
I get the result expected from the ajax call:
function getValueToDisplay(fieldType){
var returnValue;
jQuery.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "index.cfm",
async:false,
data: "fieldtype="+fieldType,
success:function(response){
returnValue = response;
}
});
return returnValue;
}
If I check the value at this point I get the expected value
console.log(returnValue) //output this --> <p>Passport Photo</p>
However when I use jQuery(selector).html to insert it inside of an existing anchor
I get:
<p><a xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Passport Photo</a></p>
I have been trying to figure out where that xmlns anchor is added but can't narrow it down to anything specific.
EDIT: I have tried forcing dataType:"html" in the ajax call...no change.
Your selector represents something that is, or is in an a tag.
A much more minimal version of your problem would be:
html:
<a id="test"></a>
js:
$('#test').html('<p>test</p>');
result:
<a id="test"><p><a xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">test</a></p></a>
Change things around so you aren't putting p tags in an a tag, or do the following:
$('#test').empty().append('<p>test</p>');
I would like to extend the answer, as of why is happening, and provide a workaround.
Doing a GreaseMonkey script i was trying to change the content of an element, perhaps not changing per se but adding more elements as the tag had only an IMG inside.
Original:
<a onclick=something><img src=url></a>
What i tried to do was to insert a DIV element that would wrap the already IMG and another new SPAN second child, so the objetive was to end up with this:
<a onclick=something><div><img src=url><span>text</span></div></a>
Using the innerHTML property it would be like this:
ANode.innerHTML = '<div>' + ANode.innerHTML + '<span>text</span></div>';
but instead i got:
<a onclick=something><div><a xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><img src=url><span>text</span></a></div></a>
Looking at the answers here did help a bit although there's no real explanation. After a while i noticed something that does not happens with the example in the question, which now i believe is the key to this issue. I was the same as jfrobishow thinking where was it happening, i thought there was something wrong concatenating the ANode.innerHTML.
Answering, at the original question, the part of narrowing it down to where does this happens, notice that the out-of-nowhere <A> was enclosing both the IMG and the new SPAN nodes, so this made me curious, the unwanted <A> was being added just before the DIV element was "built". So from this, the original example, and my following workaround you can notice that this happens when you insert a new BLOCK node inside an Anchor, as both DIV and P (original example) elements are BLOCK elements.
(If you don't know what i mean by BLOCK is from the display property of an element http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/pr_class_display.asp)
The obvious workaround is to replace the type of node you're inserting, to a non-block element, in my case the problem was the DIV i wanted, but of course it depends on the objective of your script, most of the things are there by design, i put a DIV because i needed it, so i fixed it turning that DIV into another SPAN ( which is an inline element) but i still needed to behave like a block element so put the style, this is what worked for me:
ANode.innerHTML = '<span style="display:block;">' + ANode.innerHTML + '<span>text</span></span>';
So, plainly, this problem is not from scripting (Javascript for me) but from style (CSS) stuff.
BTW, this happened at Firefox 3.6.18, notice this does not happens at Firefox 5.0.
The problem is placing block elements inside an anchor tag.
This is not valid HTML, even though most browsers will parse it fine.
You just need to use a <span></span> element inside the anchor, instead of a <div> or <p>.
This is happening because in your <html> you declared a XML Namespace (xmlns). If the xmlns anchor is not breaking anything, just leave it there.
Also, don't use async:false, make a callback function to be called on success.
EDIT: Actually that just fixed the issue with that particular value... it started happening on other values where it used to be fine.
Somehow this fixed the issue.
Changed
jQuery(selector).html(valueToDisplay)
to
jQuery(selector).html(
function(index, oldHtml)
{
return valueToDisplay;
}
);
According to the doc, if I read it right it should be doing the same thing as I am not using oldHtml in the function. (http://api.jquery.com/html/).
From the doc: "jQuery empties the element before calling the function; use the oldhtml argument to reference the previous content."
Try changing dataType in your ajax call to "text"
Using .append() instead of .html() fixed the issue for me. Never seen this before today. Why is it adding the extra xmlns? I tried changing my dataType to "text" as well, but it didn't work. It was really messing up my CSS styles as well, but using .append() completely resolved the issue. Thanks!
UPDATE: I needed to completely replace the content of my div with the result of an .ajax() query. .append() by itself wasn't sufficient, as it would just add to the content, so I found another workaround:
First clear the div:
$("#myDiv").html("");
Then, append the content using .append():
$("#myDiv").append("My content");
It's not perfect, but it works.
I'm using PopBox for magnifying thumbnails on my page.
But I want my website to work even for users which turned javascript off.
I tried to use the following HTML code:
<a href="image.jpg">
<img src="thumbnail.jpg" pbsrc="image.jpg" onclick="Pop(...);"/>
</a>
Now i need to disable the a-Tag using javascript, otherwise my PopBox won't work.
How do I do that?
Just put the onclick on the a-tag:
<img ...>
Make sure to return false either at the end of the function (here Pop) or inline like in the above example. This prevents the user from being redirected to the link by the <a>'s default behaviour.
Put the onclick event onto the link itself, and return false from the handler if you don't want the default behavior to be executed (the link to be followed)
You could give all your fallback anchor tags a particular classname, like "simple"
Using prototype, you can get an array of all tags using that class using a CSS selector, e.g.
var anchors=$$('a.simple')
Now you can iterate over that array and clear the href attributes, or install an onclick handler to override the normal behaviour, etc...
(Edited to add that the other methods listed above are much simpler, this just came from a background of doing lots of unobtrusive javascript, where your JS kicks in and goes and augments a functioning HTML page with extra stuff!)
May I suggest, in my opinion, the best solution? This is using jQuery 1.4+.
Here you have a container with all your photos. Notice the added classes.
<div id="photo-container">
<a href="image1.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail1.jpg" pbsrc="image1.jpg" />
</a>
<a href="image2.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail2.jpg" pbsrc="image2.jpg" />
</a>
<a href="image3.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail3.jpg" pbsrc="image3.jpg"/>
</a>
</div>
An then you make a single event handler this way:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
var container = $('#photo-container');
// let's bind our event handler
container.bind('click', function(event){
// thus we find (if any) the image the user has clicked on
var target = $(event.target).closest('img.popup-image');
// If the user has not hit any image, we do not handle the click
if (!target.length) return;
event.preventDefault(); // instead of return false;
// And here you can do what you want to your image
// which you can get from target
Pop(target.get(0));
});
});
</script>
The href attribute is not required for anchors (<a> tags), so get rid of it...
<a id="apic001" href="pic001.png"><img src="tn_pic001.png"></a>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.getElementById("apic001").removeAttribute("href");
</script>
This method will avoid library contention for onclick.
Tested in IE6/FF3/Chrome. Side benefit: You can link directly to the portion of the page containing that thumbnail, using the id as a URI fragment: http://whatever/gallery.html#apic001.
For maximum browser compatibility, add a name="apic001" attribute to the anchor tag in your markup ('name' and 'id' values must be identical).
Using jQuery, dojo, Prototype, etc. you should be able to do the removeAttribute on multiple, similar anchors without needing the id.
You should be able to mix and match the return false from Chris's idea with your own code:
<a href="image.jpg" onclick="return false;">
<img src="thumbnail.jpg" pbsrc="image.jpg" onclick="Pop(...);">
</a>
If someone has Javascript disabled, then their browser ignores the onclick statement in both elements and follows the link; if they have Javascript enabled, then their browser follows both OnClick statements -- the first one tells them not to follow the <a> link. ^_^