I have just stared using jQuery and although following code gets the job done, I have a feeling that it can be shortened.

var accountAddress = $(document.createElement("input")).addClass("readOnly")
        .attr("contentEditable", "false").attr("id", "d_accountAddress");

$("#customerid_c").next().next().next().append(accountAddress);

If it is not clear - what I'm doing is creating new input tag, assigning class and making it readonly, then positioning new input two TD's to the right of some known text.

Update:

This is simplified HTML that I'm modifying. The place where I add content is marked with ##1## and ##2##.

<TD id=customerid_c><LABEL for=customerid>Customer</LABEL></TD>
<TD id=customerid_d></TD>
<TD class=ms-crm-Field-Normal><LABEL>##1##</LABEL></TD>
<TD>##2##</TD>
link|improve this question

You don't need to add contentEditable=false. – SLaks Mar 22 '10 at 12:53
Is the TD field the last one in the row? If so, you can write $('tr:has(#customerid_c) td:last-child') – SLaks Mar 22 '10 at 14:01
Yes, it is the last in the row. But I'd rather not count on that. – David Vidmar Mar 22 '10 at 14:23
For tags, e.g. <td>, World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) recommends lowercase in HTML 4, and demands lowercase tags in XHTML. So generally it is good to get into the habit of using lowercase everywhere. – Majid Fouladpour Apr 28 '11 at 12:35
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 37 down vote accepted

Yes, it can.

$('#customerid_c').nextAll().eq(2)
    .append('<input class="readOnly" id="d_accountAddress" />');

In jQuery 1.4.2, you can write

$('#customerid_c~:eq(2)')
    .append('<input class="readOnly" id="d_accountAddress" />');

This selector, which does not work correctly in earlier versions of jQuery, uses the Next Siblings Selector (~) to select all sibling elements following #customerid_c, then uses the :eq selector to select the third (zero-based) element matched by the other selector.

jQuery has a large variety of selectors that can probably replace the indexed sibling. If you show us your HTML, we can find you one.

Other notes:

You can set multiple attributes in one call:

$(something).attr({ id: 'd_accountAddress', type: 'text' });
link|improve this answer
I've never seen that syntax before, what does #el~:eq(2) specifically do? – Tatu Ulmanen Mar 22 '10 at 12:54
Wow! i just learned something. thnx api.jquery.com/eq – used2could Mar 22 '10 at 12:57
I think that the ~ is used to navigate to the children of an element, in this case #customerid_c, and eq is the equality operator, in this case used to go to the 0 based index, so the third child. – Kieron Mar 22 '10 at 12:57
5  
A cleaner way to write it would be. $('#customerid_c').nextAll().eq(2).append('<input class="readOnly" id="d_accountAddress" />'); – PetersenDidIt Mar 22 '10 at 13:03
1  
@Shekhar: You can't. (Unless you hard-code the full ID, perhaps using server-side inline code) – SLaks Jan 18 '11 at 4:26
show 8 more comments
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.