Easy peasy.
$(function ()
{
var $main = $('#main'),
$1 = $('#1'),
$2 = $('#2');
$2.hide(); // hide div#2 when the page is loaded
$main.click(function ()
{
$1.toggle();
$2.toggle();
});
});
jsfiddle demo →
Edit
OP Comment: "Is there anyway i can keep track of which div is visible?"
There certainly is; it depends on how you want to use it. You can manually maintain a flag:
$(function ()
{
var $main = $('#main'),
$1 = $('#1'),
$2 = $('#2'),
$visible;
$2.hide(); // hide div#2 when the page is loaded
$visible = $1;
$main.click(function ()
{
$1.toggle();
$2.toggle();
$visible = ($visible === $1 ? $2 : $1);
});
});
Or you can just write a function that figures it out for you:
$(function ()
{
var $main = $('#main'),
$1 = $('#1'),
$2 = $('#2');
$2.hide(); // hide div#2 when the page is loaded
$main.click(function ()
{
$1.toggle();
$2.toggle();
});
function whichIsVisible()
{
if (!$1.is(':hidden')) return $1;
if (!$2.is(':hidden')) return $2;
}
});
As jAndy points out, this function can be written in a more concise/terse form:
function whichIsVisible()
{
return $1.add($2).filter(':visible');
}
However, it is semantically different from the first version. The first version returns one of:
while jAndy's version returns one of:
$1
$2
$1.add($2)
, a two-element jQuery object
$()
, an empty jQuery object
So they're not strictly equivalent.