I have a table with a list of records. each row has class "list_request" and has a cell of class "record_approval":
<table>
<tr>
<th>name</th><th>date</th><th>id</th><th>group</th><th>approval</th>
<tr class="list_request">
<td>Frank</td><td>2012-2-15</td><td>01</td><td>Account</td><td class="record_approval">Dave Ellis</td>
</tr>
<tr class="list_request">
<td>Ellen</td><td>2012-2-19</td><td>04</td><td>Admin</td><td class="record_approval">Susan Peters</td>
</tr>
<tr class="list_request">
<td>Michael</td><td>2012-2-26</td><td>06</td><td>Admin</td><td class="record_approval"></td>
</tr>
I'd like to construct a javascript function that checks whether or not "record_approval" has a value (which value is unimportant), and if so, change the css color value for that row. Essentially, the approved records should have a different color than the unapproved ones. something like...
function check_approval(){
var checkrow = document.querySelectorAll( "tr.request_list" )
var checkcell = document.querySelectorAll( "td.record_approval" )
for (i=0;i<checkcell.length;i++){
if (!checkcell.value){
this.parentNode.style.color = "ff9900";
}
else{
}
}
is this essentially the wrong approach?