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I need help showing/hiding text on a button click (specifically an arrow). I have a block of text that I have hidden and I need to slide it down in a time consistent with the arrow rotating 180 degrees. I also want it to do this only for the post above the arrow that was clicked. The solution I have come up with in this fiddle has many problems.

Here is the code:

$(function () {
    var angle = -180,
        height = "100%";
    $(".down-arrow").click(function () { 
        $(".down-arrow").css({
            '-webkit-transform': 'rotate(' + angle + 'deg)',
            '-moz-transform': 'rotate(' + angle + 'deg)',
            '-o-transform': 'rotate(' + angle + 'deg)',
            '-ms-transform': 'rotate(' + angle + 'deg)',
        });

        $(".blog-post").animate({
            'height' : height
            });
        angle -= 180;
        height = "50px";
    });
}); 

And these are the issues I am having:

  1. It slides down way too fast
  2. Once it slides back up it won't slide down again.
  3. It does it for every post
6
  • Flagging for: Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Please edit you question to include enough code to reproduce the bugs. (I considered just editing it myself except your fiddle doesn't duplicate bug #3 either.)
    – BSMP
    Oct 5, 2015 at 15:01
  • @BSMP I updated the fiddle so that it reflects the issue
    – ghost1349
    Oct 5, 2015 at 17:18
  • @ghost1349 I have posted an answer which is dynamic for as many number of div's of blog-post you have.
    – divy3993
    Oct 5, 2015 at 17:31
  • Please do not change your code to match suggested answers. Your code should reflect the problem as it was originally stated. It does not help future visitors to see the problem solved in both the question and the answer.
    – BSMP
    Oct 5, 2015 at 17:55
  • I've reverted this post to reflect the version at the time everybody answered it. If you have follow up questions please ask them separately. Apr 28, 2016 at 21:34

4 Answers 4

1

This would be more dynamic and clean to use:

  • First we will take height's of all the .blog-post div's in an array.

  • Now making height: 50px of the div, after once we know actual height of all the div's. Which will helpful in making div smooth slide as we know height's.

  • Next on click of arrow class, we will toggle class which holds transform:rotate properties. Along with that we would check corresponding .blog-post div's height. So if it is more than 50px we would make it 50px, else we would take it's actual height from array and give to it.

Here is the JS/JQuery Code:

var totalNum = $('.blog-post').length; // Counting number of .blog-post div on page.
var i, myArray = [];
for (i = 0; i < totalNum; i++) {
    var curHeight = $('.blog-post:eq(' + i + ')').outerHeight();
    myArray.push(curHeight);
}

$('.blog-post').css('height', '50px');

$('.down-arrow').click(function () {
    $(this).toggleClass('invert');
    var index = $('.down-arrow').index(this);
    var heightCheck = $('.blog-post:eq(' + index + ')').outerHeight();
    if (heightCheck < 51) {
        $('.blog-post:eq(' + index + ')').css('height', myArray[index] + 'px');
    } else {
        $('.blog-post:eq(' + index + ')').css('height', '50px');
    }
});

Working : Fiddle

If you still do not understand feel free to ask.

1
  • Glad that it helped you!
    – divy3993
    Oct 5, 2015 at 17:36
1
  1. I guess you should convert the 100% to pixels (with $(this).parent().innerHeight() or something like that, then it works well.
  2. You should build some sort of toggle: keep track of which blog-post/arrow is up and which one is down (flag the blog posts or the arrows with some sort of class) and based on that, you should let it slide up or down.
  3. Of course, you're referring to the post with a css selector. You should use a combination of $(this), .next() and .prev() functions in order to get the right post(s).
0
1
  1. "It slides down way too fast"

Just set an animation duration. See the jquery.animate() documentation.

It seems that jquery is pretty buggy when it comes to animating using percentages. http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/10669 http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/9505 Try using pixels instead of percentage http://jsfiddle.net/8obybt1d/1/

  1. "Once it slides back up it won't slide down again."

Because you are not changing the value of height back to hundred%

A rough piece of code:

if (height == "50px") {
    height = "100%";
}
else {
   height == "50px"
}
  1. "It does it for every post"

Try using the 'this' keyword.

3
  • 1 does not work, jQuery has a default duration of 400 ms. Oct 5, 2015 at 15:06
  • @TempestasLudi how do I override that 400ms?
    – ghost1349
    Oct 5, 2015 at 17:19
  • You can pass the animation duration as the second parameter in your animate function call, like $('.selector').animate({width:'0px'}, 16000);. Oct 5, 2015 at 22:06
0

To solve point 2:

$(".blog-post").animate({
...
    height = (height === "50px") ? height = "100%": height = "50px";
});

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