I would like to add a function only to links leaving my domain. I'm not too savvy w/ javascript, so I'm not sure how to code this. I'm thinking, it may be along these lines..
<script>
var links = document.getElementsByTagName ('a');
for (var l = 0; l < links.length; l++) {
str = links[l].value;
if (!str.match (/domain.com/i))
links[l].onclick = new Function('functionName(parameter)');
}
</script>
I was wondering if there was a javascript code out there that can change outgoing links. For example, lets say someone took/ripped my website. Could I have a javascript code in there that could change the outgoing links? Something that wouldn't be obvious in the code.
I wrote a funtion for all my <a href=...> tags. If I use the function, it looks like this: <a href="test.html" onFocus="myfunction()">
What I want is to automatically add myfunction() to all the links on a page. So I don't want to add onFocus=blablabla each time when I link to another page.
I have a page where I dynamically add functions to links. I want the links to pop up with the index values, why does it alway popup with 5? I expect 1,2,3 or 4. See code below:
I am new to jquery, and love it so far, but I am more of a designer, not a developer. I am learning jquery to enhance my sites, and I am having a problem figuring out buttons.
I have them working in firefox and safari, but in IE links do not work.
Basically, when you click a link a function is called with a parameter based on the particular link you run. Then the code runs through an xml file, and if the parent of the nodes I've cyling through has a value equal to the parameter past to the function, that node is used to create a new link with window.open function attached to it.It all works, or seems to, and when I alert what is being built, it looks right to me, yet the links don't work.I've attached a copy of one of the alerts of one of the links as it's built.
I have written a number of functions designed to return frequency data on 1000 randomly chosen numbers using different math functions for the rounding. I would like to include all of these functions within the wrapper of another function so that only one call is needed to get returns from all of the 'inner' functions. However, while each of the functions works in isolation, the moment I wrap them in another function they stop working. :confused:
The following code is one of the functions 'frequencyWrapperOne' that has been wrapped in the function 'testWrapper'. A call to testWrapper does nothing.
function testWrapper() { function frequencyWrapperOne() {
I have several form in my site, that validate on onsubmit.I call all the validation functions from a file call functions.js.Here is a sample of the code that is working:
I think my brain would have exploded otherwize. Some of the problems have been simple misspellings, but when you have been staring at the same thing for hours it can sorta slip by.Bascially Im not sure if Im using the function command properly. When Submit Details is click it should validate the form and then when Calculate is pressed calculate the form (obviously).I think maybe my var Array table is wrong? And the way the functions are set out doesnt seem it sit right.
Define the function dollarToEuro, which consumes a number of New Zealand dollars and produces the Euro equivalent. The current exchange rate is approximately one New Zealand Dollar to fifty five Euro pence. Code the function in JavaScript. Prompt the user for an amount in New Zealand dollars and display the result.
So far i have done this coding :- var nzd = Number(prompt("Enter The Amount Of New Zealand Dollars", "10")); function dollarToEuro(nzdollar) { return (50/nzd) } document.write(nzd, "NZD =", dollarToEuro, "Euros");
if I have two separate scripts, one that opens a popup window onclick and one that does a tool tip onmouseover, how do I tie them together inline, at the link? And i can put them in the same <script> tags in the head, right?
How do I "merge" the two functions below - checkFromDate() and checkToDate() - so that I only have one function. I want to do the same validation in both text fields, but only have one function that does all the validation.
<html> <head> <script language="JavaScript"> function checkFromDate() { var ToFrom = document.form.txtFromDate.value // Do some other validation... }
function checkToDate() { var ToDate = document.form.txtToDate.value // Do same validation as above... } </script> </head> <body> Start Date : <input type="text" name="txtFromDate" onBlur="checkFromDate()"> yyyy/mm/dd <br> End Date : <input type="text" name="txtToDate" onBlur="checkToDate()"> yyyy/mm/dd </body> </html>
I am learning HTML for the first time taking a self teaching class though my local Community College. Normally this college rocks and has some of the best resources and down to earth teachers that pick books that acutally help folks.
Well they failed and my book take more logic jumps that Stephen Hawkins! :D
So my ultimate question is as follows:
How do I created a function with the following information provided:
Create a fucntion named Mquote that contains the single parameter, Qnum.
My apologies for such little information. I am sure its my oversight that I am unable to locate the answer to my question.
What I am looking for is the base layout for noob java functions.
I want a function to take another function as a parameter, and execute it as a line of code. I put a simplified example below, just to illustrate the idea. Does anyone know the syntax to do this, or is there perhaps a better approach entirely?
// EXAMPLE
doSomething(5, 10, functionA, functionB);
function doSomething(x, y, myFunctionA, myFunctionB) { if (x > y) { myFunctionA(); } else { myFunctionB(); } }
When I click on the "Check All" checkbox, it correctly checks all of the boxes in my form, but I would like each checkbox to also call hideLayer2 function just as what would occur if the user checked the boxes individually. Is there a way to call the hideLayer2 function and pass the correct whichLayer and the_box parameters within the DoToAll function? Maybe there is an easier way? Code:
looking for a way to pass an array to a function. ==================================== <script> function myfunction(arrayname) { document.write("blablabla"+ arrayname[1] +"blablabla"); } </script>
<html stuff>
<script> arrayname = new Array("what", "is", "wrong"); myfunction(arrayname); </script> ====================================
Hello, I have a very large function that activates on one click. It does many individual events that modify my site. They all work seperately but when I put them in a single function they all break. Is there a way, order or priority for putting large things of code in functions?
How can a function be written so that it is reusable within the same form? eg, I wish to place another select menu and its own result span <span="mySpan2"> in the following code (eg. mySelect2, mySpan2) - whichever select menu is chosen displays its own result within its own span: Code: