I would like to know whether a jquery click function can be used in an"if" statement.The reason why I am asking, is because I haven't seenany examples of this being done on the web. I want to use thisapproach because currently Jquery keeps initiating two events from onemouse click, eventhough the css for each element is different.Ithink the best way to avoid this problem is to use flow control toexclude the other mouse click event. If element A is clicked then
Sorry but I can't get the very first tutorial to work. I put the custom.js in a test_jr directory in htdocs. I also put the starterkit.html file in the same directory. I copied the contents of jquery-1.4.4.min.js into a jquery.js file also in the same directory. Then I did the custom.js page shown here:
I tried clicking on the [URL] and I get the starterkit.html page. If I click on the "some link" it doesn't do anything. What am I missing? There are syntax errors in my editor starting on the line with the asterisks* Why is there an error there? It looks like it closes the click function?
i get a syntax error message (line 43 character 82) for this line if (document.contest.month.selectedIndex=5 && document.contest.day.selectedIndex=31) { what am i doing wrong here (it is an alert message if the person's birthday is the 31st of may)
Rules: create an array for the user to type 5 strings in a prompt that will be displayed in an alert box.
User must type in the prompt an alert will display what the user typed if the prompt is empty or contains nothing an alert will display telling the user to enter text user clicks ok on the alert box and is sent back to the prompt box
editor.addMenuItem = function( name, definition ) { if ( groupsOrder[ definition.group ] ) menuItems[ name ] = new CKEDITOR.menuItem( this, name, definition ); };
// This code is defined in another file:
if (editor.addMenuItems) { editor.addMenuItems({ footnote : {[code]....
what the 2nd block of code means? Does it mean : If the function editor.addMenuItems exists, then call it with the following parameters?? i.e If the function exists then execute the following:
I have an index file that contains absolute barebone html statements and a Flash application. The application is set internally to occupy 100% of the screen. Test site is Flipsauto.info I need to have a content area offset with a DIV statement but can't remember the syntax. In other words, the content area will contain text for search engine spiders to analyze but not be viewable by the user.
I got a pretty large function, one that could essentially be condensed (if you feel so inclined). I would like to know how I can get my if statements inside the toggle functions working properly. I have 4 functions and 2 of them are click functions for closing (display:none). I would like to pass a listener to the toggle funciton to listen for the $close.click(). The if statement in the toggle functions is not doing anything.
<script type="text/javascript" > $(document).ready(function(){ var $contactLink = $("#contactLink"); var $contactBox = $("#contact-container"); var $qrLink = $("#qrLink"); var $qrBox = $("#qr-container"); var $qrBack = $("#qrBack"); var $contactBack = $("#contactBack"); $contactBox.css("display","none"); $qrBox.css("display","none"); $contactLink.toggle( function(){ if($contactBox.css("display","none")){ $contactBox.css("display","inherit"); alert('here'); .....
just a quick question about syntax.What's the difference between the following functions?
$("#menu li").hover( function(event) { if ($(this).is(".active")) return;
[code]...
If you notice, at the end of the first hover function, there is an excess (), whereas on the second, there isn't. They are both functional. I was just curious as to why this is added sometimes and other times not.
My Javascript is very limited, but I get on pretty well with Jquery (I love it!) so some of what I say here may be seriously flawed I've done alot of searching on this but not found anything that fits what I need (I'd rather write and understand my own code than use a plugin) What a want is a simple function (or other means) of replicating the callback function for lengthy animations (so I don't end up with a load of functions within functions within functions) So I want to be able to animate (or change) a multiple number of elements IN TURN - ie once the previous animation has completed - eg
I know I can do this with callbacks, but as I said, this gets messy Can I stick these in an array and pass to a function to manage this (and if so how baring in mind my limited Javascript
I have a simple FAQ show/hide function set up however I am having trouble setting up an if clause. My code is: $(document).ready(function(){ $("dd").hide(); $("dt").click(function(){ $("dd").hide('slow'); $(this).next().slideToggle(); }); });
However, when you click on the same item twice it firstly hides and then reshows it, I need an if statement that basically states; if "this?!" is visible/shown Then do nothing else $("dd").hide('slow'); $(this).next().slideToggle(); I am unsure of the syntax and can't figure out what property I can trace out to see if the item is being shown or not.
Why my page is not redirecting within the if then statement.
Here is the code:
I have tried this without the if then statement and it works fine. I am not sure why my if then statement will not work within success function, am I doing something wrong?
I'm trying to add a textbox to my div -- the code to add does work but when I add in the if statement to make sure that there won't be multiple inputs, the code does not work...
1. How do I debug my own scripts? I've been learning slowing but I don't know the quick way to catch an error and print to page.
I had a look at sIFR.js code after parsing it and I have a question about function syntax. For example
var f=function(){ // statements here }();
What is the purpose if the second set of parentheses following the closing brace? Is the intention to execute the function immediately after it has been defined?
Most functions in sIFR.js do not have this syntax, but a few do.
I am not a javascripter however I have a simple need to a yes no question before someone can fill out a form. Bloew is what I have. If they click yes I'll take them to the form, if no then I will redirect them to a different page. I can not get it to work.
i'm a newbie on jquery i'm studying it with the latest version, and following a book called "Learning Jquery" but iencountered a error, and i don't know what the problem is:
i copied the code from the book like this:$('a[@href^="mailto:"]').addClass('mailto'); to try to change the links which start with "mailto" to the new class "mailto" but there's a error reported: uncaught exception: Syntax error, unrecognized expression: [@href^="mailto:"]
so i wrote this slider with some help from an admin, everything works as I would like it to but I'm trying to make it a plugin so i need to tighten up a certain part of the code:
(function( $ ){ $.fn.jmSlider = function() { // get total width of all li elements in the slider var wrapWidth = 0;
[code]....
what i would like to do is instead of using "li:first" and "li:last", i would like to use first-child and last-child so the element doesn't need to be a li, in can be anything that is the direct child of the parent container.
I have a desire to include more than one return statement in a function I have written so that when it has found the solution to a hit-testing series of conditionals, it returns the solution. The desire is to avoid further hit-tests when solution has been found. I've always felt that more than one return statement in a function is poor style, since it may lead to false execution of a function - by way of a later code edits - making a mistake by forgetting the multiple returns. My function is short and maybe the optimisation exists only in my head but are there serious reasons why one should not have more than return statement? This JS code executes in the Quartz Composer framework and has nothing to do with we programming (context (-:)
Here it is with three returns, it 'works' and I could replace all the break statements with return statements to finish optimizing: //Test for y inside range for all quads ( Quad is defined by 4 points in a row in the list is a quad ie. list[0-3], list[4-8], //Test along the unit numerals (_N) and also the 'Revert Patch' button if (y >a[0]["Y"] && y <a[2]["Y"]) { for (i=0; i <37; i+=4) { //Log("DDDDDDD "+i+" X:"+x+" Y:"+y); .....
if i group some javascript into a function that returns false; how could i carry that 'false' out of the function so it can be used outside the function.the example below shows the validate function checks for a condition then returns false if it is met. i want this false to then be passed out of the function to then throw an error in its containing function. (goal to prevent the submitting of a form)i dont want the proceed function to be called, so how can the other function prevent this.Now i realise that the validate function could be incorporated into the top level function but, my form will eventually be quite large with a multiplitude of fields so i need to know how i can call back to functions and use them as objects insteasd of repeating lots of code.
Is there a way to call a javascript function in a meta refresh statement? I'm refreshing my page but if I have data in my fields I don't want to loose them. If I can call using a JS function then in that function I can call the Submit function and save my data in the called script.
Clicking on the menu buttons, a box with some info opens, ad under that, a div that makes the body of the site black. the problem is when i click a different button, to open a different box, the "div#black" should stay open and not toggle. i tried this
var black = $("div#black").toggle() ; if (black == false { $("div#black).fadeIn("slow"); };
and this was the javascript for the button (with the toggle function, when i didn't use the if/else):
[Code]....
I don't know which is the correct way to write the if statement, i used easier ones but this one is to complex for me :D i think the main problem is the "var"