3

I have an unordered list looking like this

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 id="info-1></div>
<div id="info-2></div>

And when you hover over one of the items a window is displayed with some info regarding the item. I have worked this out for one item, now I wanna know how I can make this work for the entire list.

My initial thought was to create one script per each item... but that seems a bit thick considering the functionality of js.

Javascript

$(function(){
     $('pop a').hover(function(){
          $('#info-1').show();
     },function(){
          $('#info-1').hide();
     });
});

So my question is of course, how can I make this script to work for all items.

1
  • 2
    In future, please try to indent your code; it makes it more readable. :) Nov 24, 2012 at 20:33

5 Answers 5

10

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:

  1. 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,
  2. 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:

7
  • +1, How on earth did you compile a list of references that fast!? Nov 24, 2012 at 20:37
  • Asad, that's because he is a ninja. Also, I prefer this method to the one with the data-popup, although you have to make sure you keep you things well ordered.
    – Yan Brunet
    Nov 24, 2012 at 20:38
  • 2
    I...um, practice? And, in all honesty, it's not hard with jQuery references since it's always a predictable URL: 'http://api.jquery.com/' + methodName + '/' You should see the failed Google-fu when it comes to reliable plain-ol' JavaScript references, though. sigh I do wish the MDN would put together a similarly predictable (and obvious) reference. =) Nov 24, 2012 at 20:39
  • @David Thomas I enjoy both of your ideas, but I believe the second one is not limited to the click event if you modify your selector to $( $(this).children("a").attr("href") )jsfiddle.net/nJm5J/2.
    – DACrosby
    Nov 24, 2012 at 21:07
  • And I suppose for the sake of keeping hovers on as, you could change the hover function to look at the as instead. jsfiddle.net/nJm5J/3
    – DACrosby
    Nov 24, 2012 at 21:09
3

try this :

$(function(){
  $('#pop li').hover(function(){
     $('#info-'+$(this).index()+1).show();
  },function(){
     $('#info-'+$(this).index()+1).hide();
  });
});
2

you've binded an hover event on all a tags inside pop element (though you have syntax error, you should always add '#' when addressing an element by id) and you don't have them what you''re looking for is :

$('#pop li').hover(function() {

});
2

Here is sample http://fiddle.jshell.net/7QmR5/

HTML:

<div id="pop">
    <ul>
        <li id="li1">Item 1</li>
        <li id="li2">Item 2</li>
        <li id="li3">Item 3</li>
    </ul>
</div>

<div id="info-1" style="display:none;">info 1</div>
<div id="info-2" style="display:none;">info 2</div>
<div id="info-3" style="display:none;">info 3</div>

JavaScript:

$(function(){
    $('#pop li').hover(function(){
        $('#info-' + $(this).attr('id').replace('li','')).show();
    },function(){
        $('#info-' + $(this).attr('id').replace('li','')).hide();
    });
});​
1

I've got an easier solution:

CSS

#info-1{
    display:none;
}
ul > li:hover #info-1 {
    display:block;
}

giving the li elements an id will make it easier to select them using CSS unless you want to use pseudo I believe it's called.

Or the jQuery if needed:

$('li:eq[0]','#pop').hover(function(){
    $('info-1').show();
});
2
  • You realise your CSS version won't work, because the div elements aren't inside of the li elements. And the jQuery will only show the element, it'll not hide them again. Plus, there's a syntax error, it should be: li:eq(0) (parentheses, not brackets). And, even corrected, the OP would need to set up separate event-handlers for each li element. Then there's the context, which will work, yes, but why do that when it's easier to use $('#pop li') which doesn't use find() (internally) and instead uses, I think, the browser's querySelectorAll() to speed things up..? Nov 24, 2012 at 20:56
  • @DavidThomas My bad I missed the sytax error. Using the selector $('#pop li') will be triggered on each hover of each <li> element. I determined that the quizzer wanted a unique selector for each <li> element within the <ul>. (eg: li:eq(0) -> show #info-1, li:eq(1) - > show #info-2). And I never knew that the CSS selector wouldn't work I presumed it would as I didn't ask to find the child element '>'. How would you show the element #info-1 using ONLY CSS?
    – bashleigh
    Nov 24, 2012 at 21:12

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