1

In this script, I'm fetching a load of data from a MySQL aray, and adding in a little favourite button on each array of returned data, the code for that is

...php while code to fetch array...
...more output...
<a class="favlink" id="'.$row['id'].'">favourite</a>
..more output...

and from that, I've used this bit of jQuery to run a PHP script:

<script>
$(function() {
    $(".favlink").bind("click", function() {
        $.ajax({
            type: "GET",
            data: "v="+$(this).attr("id"),
            url: "fav.php",
            success: function(data) {
            alert('asf');
            }
        });
    });
});
</script>

That works fine, but what I actually want to do, is change the success to something like this:

success: function(data) {
$(this).html("<font color='#ccc'><a href='#'>favourited</a></font>");
}

And, that didn't work!

Is there any way I can change the clicked favourite link to a different font color / and change the text from 'favourite' to 'favourited'?

I assume the 'this' property is no longer 'this' on success for some reason, but I'm not sure?

Thank You!

3 Answers 3

3

You have to define the context of the ajax. See the docs from Jquery site:

contextObject This object will be made the context of all Ajax-related callbacks. By default, the context is an object that represents the ajax settings used in the call ($.ajaxSettings merged with the settings passed to $.ajax). For example specifying a DOM element as the context will make that the context for the complete callback of a request, like so:

$.ajax({
  url: "test.html",
  context: document.body,
  success: function(){
    $(this).addClass("done");
  }
});

So in your's case I think this is what you need:

  $.ajax({
  url: "test.html",
  context: this,//OR: $(".favlink")[0], // Depends on your scope.
  success: function(){
      $(this).html("<font color='#ccc'><a href='#'>favourited</a></font>");
  }
});
0
2

Add the following line to the $.ajax parameters. By default the context is linked to the $.ajaxSettings of the request. Setting the below line changes the context of this in the ajax request to equal that of the calling method.

context: this,

So your new code will look like this:

<script>
$(function() {
    $(".favlink").bind("click", function() {
        $.ajax({
            type: "GET",
            data: "v="+$(this).attr("id"),
            url: "fav.php",
            context: this,
            success: function(data) {
                $(this).html("<font color='#ccc'><a href='#'>favourited</a></font>");
            }
        });
    });
});
</script>
1
  • Thanks! :) Didn't realize there was a context parameter! Jan 23, 2012 at 14:20
1
$(function() {
    $('.favlink').click(function() { // this may match more than one element
        var $this = $(this);
        $.ajax({
            'type': 'GET',
            'data': 'v=' + this.id,
            'url': 'fav.php',
            'success': function(data) {
                $this.html('whatever you want');
            }
        });
    });
});

You could also use the context parameter for jQuery.ajax, but I personally think this (hah!) is more readable.

0

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.