I have just made a quick plugin for this...
It replaces the original addClass function so it stores every class you add so when you wan't to remove them it knows what classes were added with addClass
This is the new addClass function
jQuery.fn._addClass = jQuery.fn.addClass; // Keep a copy of the addClass function
jQuery.fn.addClass = function( params ) {
var _params = params.split(' '); // Split the classes into array
var classes = this.data('classes') || []; // Get the current dynamic classes
jQuery.each(_params, function( i, c ) {
classes.push(c);
}); // push the classes into the array
this.data('classes', classes); // Re-set all classes
this._addClass(params); // Add the class with the new addClass function
return this;
};
And here is the remove dynamic classes function
jQuery.fn.remove_dynamic_classes = function() {
var classes = this.data('classes')
if( !classes ) return this;
this.removeClass( classes.join(' ') );
return this;
};
Usage:
$('#test').addClass('one two three');
$('#test').remove_dynamic_classes(); // This will remove classes 'one', 'two', 'three'
Here is a demo
This can probably be improved, but it's late and i may take a look at it tomorrow. You will have to inspect the element and play with the addClass function to see that it works.
Quick copy version
jQuery.fn._addClass=jQuery.fn.addClass;jQuery.fn.addClass=function(e){var t=e.split(" ");var n=this.data("classes")||[];jQuery.each(t,function(e,t){n.push(t)});this.data("classes",n);this._addClass(e);return this};jQuery.fn.remove_dynamic_classes=function(){var e=this.data("classes");if(!e)return this;this.removeClass(e.join(" "));return this}
mutation observer
may be able to detect it, but yet still, the logic and processing required behind it may become cumbersome depending on the amount of elements you must observe.