35

what is the right way to determine if an object has one class OR another one? The following is appearantly wrong..

if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item' || 'current-menu-parent') ) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Thanks!

0

7 Answers 7

75

You could use is instead?

if ($('#menu-item-49').is('.current-menu-item, .current-menu-parent')) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Check the current matched set of elements against a selector and return true if at least one of these elements matches the selector.

Beats having to use multiple hasClass queries, which is the alternative:

if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item') || 
    $('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-parent')) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}
4
2

You cannot use the || (or) operator within hasClass. Try this:

if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item') || 
    $('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-parent')) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Or you can do this if that's too verbose:

var $menuItem = $('#menu-item-49');
if ($menuItem.hasClass('current-menu-item') || 
    $menuItem.hasClass('current-menu-parent')) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Or even better:

var $menuItem = $('#menu-item-49');
if ($menuItem.is('.current-menu-item, .current-menu-parent')) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}
1
  • In your last version, shouldn't the comma be inside the quotes? '.current-menu-item,.current-menu-parent' I'm pretty sure is() only accepts 1 argument, but the other answer with this solution did the same thing, so now I'm starting to doubt myself. :o)
    – user113716
    Jul 7, 2010 at 19:35
1
if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item') || $('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-parent') ) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Have you tried the following?

1

You can also use .is() to check for any class beginning with current-menu- by using:

if ( $('#menu-item-49').is('[class]^="current-menu-"') ) {
    //49 is the current menu!
}

More attribute selectors like ^= may be found here.

1
  • There's a problem with this snippet, syntax-wise. It should rather be: if ( $('#menu-item-49').is('[class^="current-menu-"]') ) { //49 is the current menu! } Oct 26, 2016 at 15:42
0

The following is what you've in mind:

var menuItem49 = $('#menu-item-49');
if (menuItem49.hasClass('current-menu-item') || menuItem49.hasClass('current-menu-parent')) {
    // ...
}
0
0

So close!

Try:

if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item') || $('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-parent') ) {
  $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block'); 
}
0

Do it like this instead, separating it in two bits:

if ($('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-item') || $('#menu-item-49').hasClass('current-menu-parent') ){
   $('ul.sub-menu ').css('display', 'block');
}

Hope this helps you

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