0

So I want to simplify this into one function but I don't know how to. It seems that I should be able to pull the variable from the click ids and then use it in the hidden id selector.

$(document).ready(function(){
      $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
    $("#click1").click(function(){
        $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden1").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden1").animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
        $("#hidden1").stop();
        });  
    $("#click2").click(function(){
        $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden2").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden2").animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
        $("#hidden2").stop();
        });  
    $("#click3").click(function(){
        $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden3").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden3").animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
        $("#hidden3").stop();
        });  
    $("#click4").click(function(){
        $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden4").animate({opacity:'0'});
        $("#hidden4").animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
        $("#hidden4").stop();
        });  
    });


    <p id="click1">hover</p>
    <p id="click2">hover</p>
    <p id="click3">hover</p>
    <p id="click4">hover</p>

    <p id="hidden1" class="hidden">hidden 1</p>
    <p id="hidden2" class="hidden">hidden 2</p>
    <p id="hidden3" class="hidden">hidden 3</p>
    <p id="hidden4" class="hidden">hidden 4</p>

5 Answers 5

1

Something like

$(".hidden").css({opacity:'0'});
$("p[id^=click]").click(function(){
    var sufix = this.id.substring(5);
    var el = $("#hidden" + sufix);
    $(".hidden").stop().not(el).animate({opacity:'0'});
    el.animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");
}); 

Demo: Fiddle

You if want a better performance use $('#click1, #click2, #click3, #click4') instead of $("p[id^=click]")

1
  • Thank you. I didn't know about substring. Mar 18, 2013 at 16:57
0

give all your hover-p's the same class, e.g. clickable.

I haven't tested the call to index, but it should work so or similar...

$(document).ready(function(){
      $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
      $(".clickable").click(function(){
          $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
          var idx = "#hidden" + $(".clickable").index(this);
          $(idx).animate({opacity:'0'});
          $(idx).animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
          $(idx).stop();
      });  
 });

edit: or use Arun P Johny's selector for extra points: p[id^=click]

0

Use data attribute. It is easy to use, clear to understand and it is valid.

<p class="click" data-id="1">hover</p>
<p class="click" data-id="2">hover</p>
<p class="click" data-id="3">hover</p>
<p class="click" data-id="4">hover</p>

<p class="hidden" data-id="1">hidden 1</p>
<p class="hidden" data-id="2">hidden 2</p>
<p class="hidden" data-id="3">hidden 3</p>
<p class="hidden" data-id="4">hidden 4</p>


<script>
    function get_by_data(selector, data_string, data_value) {
        return $(selector + '[data-' + data_string + '="' + data_value + '"]');
    }
    $(document).ready(function() {
        $('.hidden').animate({opacity: '0'});
        $('.click').click(function() {
            var id = $(this).data('id');
            var $hidden = get_by_data('.hidden', 'id', id);
            $('.hidden').animate({opacity: '0'});
            $hidden.animate({opacity:'1'},'slow').stop();
        });
    });
</script>
3
  • Thank you that worked like a charm. Now I just need to understand it. Mar 18, 2013 at 16:42
  • @MatthewPoulson Using data, you can define your own attributes of html tags (it's very cool sometimes). Here i define data-id attribute. To select element via data attribute you should write e.g $('.click[data-id="1"]'), but it's tough way when id is js variable, so i use function get_by_data which has selector, data attribute name and data value as arguments and returns jQuery object. Function data('id') is standart jQuery function, it returns value in data attribute of the element
    – imkost
    Mar 18, 2013 at 16:55
  • why is function get_by_data(selector, data_string, data_value) { return $(selector + '[data-' + data_string + '="' + data_value + '"]'); } not in the $(document).ready(function() {...} block? Mar 18, 2013 at 18:14
0

Split the tags into a shared class click and a unique tag, say index. Then listen for elements of the shared class to be clicked in general.

Inside the click callback you can get the actual clicked element using $(this). From that we get the index tag using attr('index'). Given that we can apply animations only to the related hidden object.

Therefore first fetch all hidden objects with $(".hidden") and then apply a filter to find the element with the correct index tag with .filter('[index="' + number + '"]').

HTML

<p class="click" index="1">hover</p>
<p class="click" index="2">hover</p>
<p class="click" index="3">hover</p>
<p class="click" index="4">hover</p>

<p class="hidden" index="1">hidden 1</p>
<p class="hidden" index="2">hidden 2</p>
<p class="hidden" index="3">hidden 3</p>
<p class="hidden" index="4">hidden 4</p>

JavaScript

$(document).ready(function(){

    $('.hidden').animate({ opacity:'0' });

    $('.click').click(function(){
        $('.hidden').animate({ opacity:'0' });

        var number = $(this).attr("index");

        $('.hidden').filter('[index="' + number + '"]')
               .animate({ opacity:'0' })
               .animate({ opacity:'1' },"slow")
               .stop();
    });
});

Moreover you can shorten the code by chaining functions executed on the same object like shown above.

Here is a working fiddle containing the code above. (Just for fun I made a styled version, too.)

2
  • 1
    Thank you I didn't know I could chain functions like that. Mar 18, 2013 at 16:47
  • @MatthewPoulson. Check out the styled version which includes some general improvements not related to your question. By the way, if one of the answers solved your question you should mark that as accepted. Therefore simply click on the tick mark next to the most helpful answer.
    – danijar
    Mar 18, 2013 at 17:47
-1

You can use a for, from 1 to 4. And then inside you can have

$("#click" + index).click(function(){
    $(".hidden").animate({opacity:'0'});
    $("#hidden" + index).animate({opacity:'0'});
    $("#hidden" + index).animate({opacity:'1'},"slow");    
    $("#hidden" + index).stop();
    });
2
  • be careful about closures.
    – J. Holmes
    Mar 18, 2013 at 16:16
  • See this answer for a summary, and there are a lot of other resources on the topic in javascript. Also FYI, I'm not the downvoter
    – J. Holmes
    Mar 18, 2013 at 17:52

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