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Hey,

I am using the following jquery code:

$("#top ul li.corner").mouseover(function(){
    $("span.left-corner").addClass("left-corner-hover");
    $("span.right-corner").addClass("right-corner-hover");
    $("span.content").addClass("content-hover");
}).mouseout(function(){
    $("span.left-corner").removeClass("left-corner-hover");
    $("span.right-corner").removeClass("right-corner-hover");
    $("span.content").removeClass("content-hover");

});

But as you see in the selector that is going to do every li.corner that the mouse is over. i am trying to get it to do only the one the mouse is over, how would I achieve that?

Thanks,

Ryan

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6 Answers

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i tried to approximate what i imagined your code would look like, and the test runs fine:

css:

.left-corner-hover, .right-corner-hover, .content-hover {
    background-color: #CCC;
}

jQuery:

$("#top ul li.corner").mouseover(function(){
    $("span.left-corner", this).addClass("left-corner-hover");
    $("span.right-corner", this).addClass("right-corner-hover");
    $("span.content", this).addClass("content-hover");
}).mouseout(function(){
    $("span.left-corner", this).removeClass("left-corner-hover");
    $("span.right-corner", this).removeClass("right-corner-hover");
    $("span.content", this).removeClass("content-hover");

});

html:

<div id="top">
    <ul>
        <li class="corner">
            <span class="left-corner">Left Corner</span>
            <span class="content">Content</span>
            <span class="right-corner">Right Corner</span>
        </li>
    </ul>
    <ul>
        <li class="corner">
            <span class="left-corner">Left Corner</span>
            <span class="content">Content</span>
            <span class="right-corner">Right Corner</span>
        </li>
    </ul>
<div>
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are your <span> elements within your <li>? if so you could do something like:

$('#top ul li.corner').mouseover(function() {
    $('span.left-corner', this).addClass('left-corner-hover');
    // etc...
}).mouseout(function() {
    $('span.left-corner', this).removeClass('left-corner-hover');
    // etc...
});

basically, this would assign/remove the classes to the specific <span> elements within the <li> called.

depending on how much stuff is in there, you may get better results using mouseenter and mouseleave, to avoid triggering mouseover when you cross element boundaries:

$('#top ul li.corner').bind('mouseenter', function() {
  // etc...
}).bind('mouseleave', function() {
  // etc...
});
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Hey Owen,

I have this now:

$("#top ul li.corner").mouseover(function(){
    $("span.left-corner",this).addClass("left-corner-hover");
    $("span.right-corner",this).addClass("right-corner-hover");
    $("span.content",this).addClass("content-hover");

For one section and now only the one i have a mouseover on has the hover effect, but it is not working with the "content-hover" class, just the corners are having the effect.

Exactly what does the this tell that code? To separate it?

Thanks,

Ryan

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can you post the sample HTML of a li.corner block with spans? – Owen Nov 28 '08 at 20:33
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Try:

$("#top ul li.corner").mouseover(function(){
    $(this).find(".left-corner").addClass("left-corner-hover");
    // ...
});

You probably don't need to specify that it's a 'span' element.

Another thing to try is to just add and remove the 'hover' class, and have your CSS rules look like:

.left-corner.hover { ... }
.right-corner.hover { ... }
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Hey Owen, my HTML looks like:

<ul>
	<li class="corner">
		<span class="left-corner"></span>
		<span class="content"><a href="http://www.ryancoughlin.com/index.php" title="Go Home">home</a></span>
		<span class="right-corner"></span>
	</li>
	<li class="corner">
		<span class="left-corner"></span>
		<span class="content"><a href="http://www.ryancoughlin.com/category/tutorials/" title="View Tutorials">tutorials</a></span>
		<span class="right-corner"></span>
	</li>
</ul>

Check it out here at my site: http://www.ryancoughlin.com/index.php - the top bar.

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right i think your problem is one of your CSS declarations. looks like it might be "#top ul li.corner span.content", which sets a background-color to #2c2c2c after hover is declared. you might want to make sure "#top ul li.corner span.content-hover" is declared after that. – Owen Nov 28 '08 at 21:32
just to add, you can try my quick test sample, which is similar to your setup to "prove" that it works (and thus suggest a CSS conflict). nice site btw :) – Owen Nov 28 '08 at 21:34
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Hey Owen...thank you very much for your help! Moving the declaration cleared it up. So it was just overwriting it?

Also, what did adding the ",this" do?

And Orip:

$("#top ul li.corner").mouseover(function(){
    $(this).find(".left-corner").addClass("left-corner-hover");
    // ...
});

What does this do compared to the other code?

Thanks both of you.

Ryan

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adding "this" means, look for the elements within "this". within a function, this refers to the parent element (in your case, the li that was mouseover'ed). find() basically returns the occurances of that selector, and is functionally equivalent to selecting it on it's own. – Owen Nov 28 '08 at 21:57
Great owen! Thank you! Ryan – Coughlin Nov 29 '08 at 5:02

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