I like to treat the DOM in an object oriented fashion so that I can have a highly repetitive structure and perform actions to particular parts. For example, say I have this:
<div class='clickable'>This is Div1
<div class='attr1'>Hello there</div>
<div class='attr2'>Foo-Bar</div>
</div>
<div class='clickable'>This is Div2
<div class='attr1'>Hello there</div>
<div class='attr2'>Foo-Bar</div>
</div>
And then I have some javascript to say that all div's of class 'clickable' run this function:
function wasClicked(e){
//just some magic so that 'clicked' references the whichever div was clicked
var clicked = var sender = (e && e.target) || (window.event && window.event.srcElement);
$(clicked).children('.attr1').css('background-color','blue')
}
So now, if any div of class 'clickable' is clicked and it has a child div of class 'attr1', then the 'attr1' div will have it's background color-change. And this will only happen for the one div that's been clicked.
I love using this "don't repeat yourself principle", but is there a cleaner way to do this? I don't think the class
attribute of the DOM was supposed to be used for this purpose. I could carelessly create two child divs with the same class by accident. And the $(clicked).children.('attr1')...
is just ugly.
There's gotta be a better way.
div
s, you undermine HTML's semantics, which are what makes pages accessible. When removing all scripts and CSS, all you will see now is text. Your browser now does not know which items are headers, paragraphs or other elements. Same goes for crawlers and screen readers. I recommend reading about semantics. HTML is not a programming language, but a markup language. Please don't treat it as something it is not.