I'd suggest:
$('#pop li').hover(
function() {
$('div.info').eq($(this).index()).show();
}, function() {
$('div.info').eq($(this).index()).hide();
});
Working with slightly-changed HTML:
<div id="pop">
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
<li>Item 4</li>
<li>Item 5</li>
<li>Item 6</li>
<li>Item 7</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
<div class="info"></div>
JS Fiddle demo.
What I forgot to say is that this will show the .info
element that corresponds to the same index
as the currently hovered-over li
element, so hovering the first li
will show the first .info
, and so on. So it's dependant on maintaining a predictable relationship between the li
and the .info
elements.
As an aside, it's possible to replicate this interaction using just CSS, albeit it requires a click rather than a hover event, so long as you amend the li
HTML to include a link that points to the id
of the relevant div
:
<div id="pop">
<ul>
<li><a href="#info1">Item 1</a></li>
<li><a href="#info2">Item 2</a></li>
<li><a href="#info3">Item 3</a></li>
<li><a href="#info4">Item 4</a></li>
<li><a href="#info5">Item 5</a></li>
<li><a href="#info6">Item 6</a></li>
<li><a href="#info7">Item 7</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="info" id="info1"></div>
<div class="info" id="info2"></div>
<div class="info" id="info3"></div>
<div class="info" id="info4"></div>
<div class="info" id="info5"></div>
<div class="info" id="info6"></div>
<div class="info" id="info7"></div>
And the CSS:
.info {
/* hides by default */
display: none;
}
.info:target {
/* shows when targeted */
display: block;
}
JS Fiddle demo.
Incidentally, quoting attributes is optional (though if it's an attribute that contains white-space it must be quoted), but if you quote you must have a quote at both ends of the value you're quoting: <div id="info-1></div>
is not valid HTML (since the string isn't closed until the next line at the beginning of the next attribute); use: <div id="info-1"></div>
.
And, further, your posted jQuery:
$(function(){
$('pop a').hover(function(){
$('#info-1').show();
},function(){
$('#info-1').hide();
});
});
This can't work, because:
- the selector won't match any elements, you're trying to target an
a
element inside of a pop
element (which, obviously, doesn't exist). What you need to do is preface the id
with a #
(as you do in the next line, so I'm assuming a typo there), to give: $('#pop a')
. But,
- there are no
a
elements in the #pop
element, therefore no events will be, or can be, bound.
If you need to use that form, however, then a couple of adaptations can make it work:
$(function(){
$('#pop li').hover(function(){
$('#info-' + $(this).text().match(/(\d+)/)).show();
},function(){
$('#info-' + $(this).text().match(/(\d+)/)).hide();
});
});
JS Fiddle demo.
References: