I'm working on programming a small control panel system, part of which involves some multi-window management. I've written a nice class, and everything works fine, except when I try to close it. For example, I have this function:
var topwin = "something";
function closeTop() {
for (var i = 0; i < links.length; i++) {
if (links[i].fetch == topwin) {
links[i].close();
break;
}
}
}
When I define the function by pasting it into the console, it works and behaves correctly. But, just being included in window.js along with everything else, it does not work :it misbehaves and closes ALL windows. Idas?
Edit: More code
this.close = function () {
$("a[href='"+this.fetch+"']", "#windowlist").css({height: "0px", padding: '0px 20px', margin:'0px'});
var me = this.me;
var fetch = this.fetch;
setTimeout(function() {
me.remove();
$("a[href='"+this.fetch+"']", "#windowlist").remove();
deleteme = fetch;
sendtotop(links[0].fetch);
update();
}, 300);
}
-
function update () {
thread = "";
for (var i = 0; i < links.length; i++) {
if (deleteme==links[i].fetch) {
links.splice(i, 1);
deleteme = null;
i--;
continue;
}
thread += '<li><a href="'+ links[i].fetch +'">'+ links[i].name +'<span>x</span></a></li>';
}
$("#windowlist").html(thread);
}
console.log(links[i])
in your loop, just before you close(). Then look at the output it generates in the web inspector's console. For some reason, the items in your links array are being considered equal to the topwin, but you haven't provided enough context for us to say why that happens.links
? I can see it's an array and it's got afetch
property and aclose()
method. I'm imagining each element in thelinks
array is based the 'nice class' you mentioned and I'm assumingfetch
is the name of the window in each case, but (apart from the obvious!) what is theclose()
method doing exactly?