0

that's probably a silly question, but i have a problem not with the code not functioning - it's rather the code is too long...

everything works fine but for example is there a way to shorten the if/else ? or is it possible to track 4 different var but with a shorter code ?

var transitionState_N = '-';
var transitionState_X = '-';
var transitionState_Y = '-';
var transitionState_Z= '-';

// carousel 4way
function carousel_4way_N (n, el, m) {
    var carousel = '#carousel-4way-nav-' + n
    var carousel_content = '#carousel-4way-' + n
        if (transitionState_N == '-')
          {
          transitionState_N = '+';
          }
          else
          {
          transitionState_N = '-';
          }
        $(carousel_reset).hide();
        $(carousel).transition(
        {y: m + '=10',delay:200}
        );
        };

function carousel_4way_X (n, el, m) {
    var carousel = '#carousel-4way-nav-' + n
    var carousel_content = '#carousel-4way-' + n
        if (transitionState_X == '-')
          {
          transitionState_X = '+';
          }
          else
          {
          transitionState_X = '-';
          }
        $(carousel_reset).hide();
        $(carousel).transition(
        {y: m + '=10',delay:200}
        );
        };

function carousel_4way_Y (n, el, m) {
    var carousel = '#carousel-4way-nav-' + n
    var carousel_content = '#carousel-4way-' + n
        if (transitionState_Y == '-')
          {
          transitionState_Y = '+';
          }
          else
          {
          transitionState_Y = '-';
          }
        $(carousel_reset).hide();
        $(carousel).transition(
        {y: m + '=10',delay:200}
        );
        };

function carousel_4way_Z (n, el, m) {
    var carousel = '#carousel-4way-nav-' + n
    var carousel_content = '#carousel-4way-' + n
        if (transitionState_Z == '-')
          {
          transitionState_Z = '+';
          }
          else
          {
          transitionState_Z = '-';
          }
        $(carousel_reset).hide();
        $(carousel).transition(
        {y: m + '=10',delay:200}
        );
        };

$('#carousel-4way-nav-1').click(function(event){
    $(carousel_reset_nav).not(this).transition(
    {y:0});
    return carousel_4way_N(1, this, (transitionState == '-') ? '+' : '-');
    event.preventDefault();
});

$('#carousel-4way-nav-2').click(function(event){
    $(carousel_reset_nav).not(this).transition(
    {y:0});
    return carousel_4way_X(2, this, (transitionState == '-') ? '+' : '-');
    event.preventDefault();
});

$('#carousel-4way-nav-3').click(function(event){
    $(carousel_reset_nav).not(this).transition(
    {y:0});
    return carousel_4way_Y(3, this, (transitionState == '-') ? '+' : '-');
    event.preventDefault();
});

$('#carousel-4way-nav-4').click(function(event){
    $(carousel_reset_nav).not(this).transition(
    {y:0});
    return carousel_4way_Z(4, this, (transitionState == '-') ? '+' : '-');
    event.preventDefault();
});
3
  • 2
    You should post this question on codereview.stackexchange.com.
    – kojiro
    Feb 12, 2013 at 20:46
  • Usually if I have code like this, I look for parts that are essentially the same and put them in functions so the code only exists once.
    – Leeish
    Feb 12, 2013 at 20:47
  • The event.preventDefault() is dead code (it's after the return). Also, there are a lot of unused variables
    – Alexander
    Feb 12, 2013 at 20:52

2 Answers 2

2

The ternary operator makes it somewhat more readable:

transitionState_N  = (transitionState_N == '-') ? '+' : '-';

Your functions are really repetitive. Look for code you repeat often and write a function to replace it.

1
  • Ha, i used it on my clicks but didn't know what it is exactly because that was done with another stackoverflow user help. where can i find documentation on this?
    – dyb
    Feb 12, 2013 at 21:12
0

Here is what I would do: for one, you can assign click() function to all elements. Then, you can get the id of each element and extract the last character that is a digit.

$('#carousel-4way-nav-1, #carousel-4way-nav-2,#carousel-4way-nav-3, #carousel-4way-nav-4').click(function(event){
    $(carousel_reset_nav).not(this).transition(
    {y:0});
    return carousel_4way(($(this).attr('id')).substring(this.length -1), this, (transitionState == '-') ? '+' : '-');
    event.preventDefault();
});

Now all of this will call the same function:

function carousel_4way(n, el, m) {
    var carousel = '#carousel-4way-nav-' + n
    var carousel_content = '#carousel-4way-' + n
        switch(n){
            case 1:
               transitionState_N  = (transitionState_N == '-') ? '+' : '-';
            case 2:
               transitionState_X = ...
            ...
        }
     $(carousel_reset).hide();
     $(carousel).transition(
        {y: m + '=10',delay:200}
     );
};

you might need to work on a syntax, but you get the general idea

2
  • That's very nice. I'll definitely implement this. But could you explain how to get multiple variables with one var? Because in this code there is transitionState_N - and i need to also have _X _Y _Z and these need to be tracked alone.
    – dyb
    Feb 13, 2013 at 13:04
  • Sorry, just noticed that it was not self explanatory (edited the code above) you will still have all four variables, you will iterate through them with switch statement Feb 13, 2013 at 14:39

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.