Within your iterator function, this
will be the matching DOM element. That element has a className
property with a space-delimited list of the classes on the element. There may well be more than one, unless you know in your markup that there will only be one.
If only one, just use this.className
directly.
var newclass = this.className;
If more than one, you may find jQuery's hasClass
function useful:
var $this = $(this);
if ($this.hasClass('effect1')) {
// ...
}
else if ($this.hasClass('effect2') {
// ...
}
// ...
But, if you want to do different things depending on which class the element matched, it probably makes more sense to break up your query. Then you may not even need each
, if you're trying to do something to all elements matching a given class.
For example:
jQuery(".effect1").animate({/*..settings for effect1..*/);
jQuery(".effect2").animate({/*..settings for effect2..*/);
jQuery(".effect3").animate({/*..settings for effect3..*/);
jQuery(".effect4").animate({/*..settings for effect4..*/);
From your comment, it sounds like you might want a dispatch map, like this:
var map = {
effect1: function() { /* ...stuff for effect1... */ },
effect2: function() { /* ...stuff for effect2... */ },
// ...and so on...
};
You put that on the main level of your code.
Within the each
(if you want to use each
), you can identify the first effectX
class in this.className
like this:
var match = /effect\d/.exec(this.className);
var cls = match && match[0];
And then you can use your dispatch map with it:
if (cls) {
map[cls].call(this);
}
That calls the function, making this
within the function the DOM element. Or you could pass it as an argument instead:
if (cls) {
map[cls](this);
}
...and have your dispatch functions accept it, e.g. effect1: function(element) {...