jQuery's next() function returns the next sibling as they appear in the DOM tree (not in jQuery resultset) for all matched elements. So calling
$("#container .swaps:first")
gets the first anchor, and calling next() on it returns undefined as it has no next sibling. I think you might want to implement the Iterator pattern if you want to access the nodes successively by calling next().
The jQuery object is an array of items. You could just store the current index in a variable, and increment it after getting the next element.
// Naive way
var items = $("#container .swaps");
var i = 0;
items[i++] // first <a>
items[i++] // second <a>
Here are two implementations that wrap the above functionality using the Iterator pattern - one that works as a jQuery plugin, the other is basically a separate function. Both work the same:
// Iterator function
function Iterator(list) {
var results = list;
var i = 0;
this.next = function() {
return results[i++];
};
return this;
}
// Usage
var iterator = Iterator($("#container .swaps"));
iterator.next() // first <a>
iterator.next() // second <a>
The second one is almost identical to the first one, but is used a jQuery plugin instead:
// jQuery plugin
$.fn.iterator = function() {
var i = 0;
this.next = function() {
return this[i++];
};
return this;
};
// Usage
var iterator = $("#container .swaps").iterator();
iterator.next() // first <a>
iterator.next() // second <a>
Javascript 1.7 has some cool features in generators and iterators for doing just this, but it's not still not widespread - only Firefox supports it as far as I know.
<a class="swaps"..when you callthisone.next()? – Anurag Apr 7 '10 at 4:37