0

I have an "add" button that inserts this row everytime it is clicked. Each row has an Edit and Delete button.

//html
<tr class="insertedRow">
    <td><input type="hidden" class="name" /></td>
    <td><input type="hidden" class="age" /></td>
    <td>
        <input type="button" class="edit" class="btn" value="Edit" />
        <input type="button" class="delete" value="Delete" />
    </td>
</tr>

I have this jQuery to Delete the corresponding row that you want deleted. But I can't figure out how to select "name" and "age" of the corresponding row when you click "Edit" The code I have right now is always targeting the first inserted row. Any ideas? Thanks.

I think I need to somehow select the parent.parent of the "Edit" button and then target the "name" and "age" id's.

//jQuery
$(".delete").live('click',function() {
    $(this).parent().parent().remove();
});

$(".edit").live('click',function() {
    $('.name').clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter('.name').prev().remove();
    $('.age').clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter('.age').prev().remove();
});
2
  • @gdoron live is still alive. :)
    – Ram
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:18
  • @undefined, you probably meant: unfortunately still alive...
    – gdoron
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:21

5 Answers 5

0

first convert id to class:

<td><input type="hidden" class="name" /></td>
<td><input type="hidden" class="age" /></td>

then :

$("#edit").live('click',function() { $name =
   var name =  $(this).closest(".insertedRow").find(".name");
   var age =  $(this).closest(".insertedRow").find(".age");

   name.clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter(name).prev().remove();
   age.clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter(age).prev().remove();
});
4
  • So is it okay to do this in Internet Explorer? Oct 18, 2012 at 16:42
  • @user1738750 with jQuery you will never have issue with any browser
    – mgraph
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:52
  • Others are saying that Internet Explorer does not allow you to change the type attr and will throw and error Oct 18, 2012 at 16:54
  • @user1738750 for that i don't know, but there is an other solution for that is to make 2 name input one is hidden and the other is text and show the one you want
    – mgraph
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:56
0

You can't clone an element with an id attribute on it, unless you change its id.

Please read this to understand why it gives you the first element every time.

1
  • Can we make it a class instead? Oct 18, 2012 at 16:19
0

to avoid duplicated id, you can do something like this

var lastid = $('[id^="clonedInput"]').length + 1;
$(".clonedInput").last().clone().attr('id', 'clonedInput' + lastid).appendTo("body")

or use a .class

1
  • I dont think they need to be id's. I have changed them to classes Oct 18, 2012 at 16:24
0

This are the values:

$(this).parent().find(".name").text();
$(this).parent().find(".age").text();

and your edit function:

$(".edit").live('click',function() {
    $('.name').clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter('.name').value($(this).parent().find(".name").text()).prev().remove();
    $('.age').clone().attr('type','text').insertAfter('.age').value($(this).parent().find(".age").text()).prev().remove();
});
0

For one thing, your click event handler is targeting an ID named '#name'... but your cloning of the rows ensures you're going to have multiple elements with the same ID.

Also, jQuery's documents make it fairly clear that changing the type attr is prohibited: http://api.jquery.com/attr/

Note: jQuery prohibits changing the type attribute on an or element and will throw an error in all browsers. This is because the type attribute cannot be changed in Internet Explorer.

Also, as others have pointed out, you probably should not be using .live() as it's deprecated (means it's going away in the indeterminate future)... you should look at using .on(), as that's the supported direction.

2
  • Okay thanks for the awnser. I thought clone was a work around for changing the type attr. Oct 18, 2012 at 16:34
  • If you're going to those lengths, rather than touching the DOM so many times in one call, it might be a lot better for you to simply create a string representation of what you want to make, and insert that with .append(). The more often you do a selector-call, the more expensive the call is, as it forces jQuery to reparse the DOM and find elements for you. Last I checked, .html("<div id='myID' style='border:red'>mow mow</div>") is still more performant than $("<div id='myID' />").attr('blah','boo').html('mow mow').css('border','red'). Oct 18, 2012 at 16:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.