1

How do I access the parent sibling?

I'm looking at these two:

elem.parent().siblings('#js-userLogged').val()
elem.parent().siblings('#js-eventId').val()

...= function()
{
    function addComment(elem, comment)
    {
        $.post('/shindig/ajax-add-comment', 
        {
            eventId : elem.parent().siblings('#js-eventId').val(), 
            userLogged : elem.parent().siblings('#js-userLogged').val(), 
            comment: comment, 
            ajax: true
        }, 
        function(data)
        {
            ... 

HTML:

<div class="newComments">
    <input id="js-userLogged" type="hidden" value="111111111" name="userLogged"/>
    <input id="js-eventId" type="hidden" value="9999" name="eventId"/>
    <textarea class="addComment" value="Write a comment..." placeholder="Write a comment..." title="Write a comment..." ></textarea>
</div>
5
  • what is elem? is it one of the input/textarea fields Dec 31, 2013 at 4:09
  • function addComment(elem, comment){ which is being called from Shindig.addComment($(this), comment);
    – LeviXC
    Dec 31, 2013 at 4:11
  • ... yes its the textarea
    – LeviXC
    Dec 31, 2013 at 4:11
  • 1
    Depending on what you're expecting .siblings('#js-eventId') to find, it may not support what you have in mind. ids should only be used once throughout the <html> document and so jQuery will stop looking after the 1st. Dec 31, 2013 at 4:12
  • Im expecting to find each of the input field within its parent. div. newComments is one of many fields. For example, I needed to display the comment field for each element set, and did this without a unique idea by working the DOM like so: $(".js-event-comment").click(function(){ $(this).parents(".event-info").siblings(".comments").slideToggle("fast"); }); I was looking to do the same thing, but I dont know how to do this within the a function without passing each field value at the point of calling the method.
    – LeviXC
    Dec 31, 2013 at 4:17

1 Answer 1

1

If elem is the textarea then the input fields are its siblings, not the parent elements. so try

$.post('/shindig/ajax-add-comment', {
    eventId: elem.siblings('#js-eventId').val(),
    userLogged: elem.siblings('#js-userLogged').val(),
    comment: comment,
    ajax: true
}, function (data) {})

Also note that the id of elements must be unique, so if you have multiple structures like this in your page then it will be better to use a class/name attribute to find the element like

$.post('/shindig/ajax-add-comment', {
    eventId: elem.siblings('[name="eventId"]').val(),
    userLogged: elem.siblings('[name="userLogged"]').val(),
    comment: comment,
    ajax: true
}, function (data) {})
1
  • Thanks, I'll mark your answer as correct as soon as Stack allows me.
    – LeviXC
    Dec 31, 2013 at 4:22

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.