2

Each page of my site has 10 (almost) identical divs, varying only in the text within. When a certain part of a div is clicked, I want a different part of that div to be modified.

I'm using this code:

$(document).ready(function(){
 $(".notLogged img").mouseover(function(){
  $(this).parent()>$("span").html("You must be logged in to vote.");
 })
})

I thought this would work as follows: For all img elements within a "notLogged" classed div, a mouseover would cause a different part of that div to change.

However, that's not what happens. Whenever that mouseover event is triggered, all divs with the "notLogged" class are modified.

How can I modify this code so only the div in which the mouseover originated is modified?

0

2 Answers 2

8

Try it like this:

$(document).ready(function(){
 $(".notLogged img").mouseover(function(){
  $(this).parent().find("span").html("You must be logged in to vote.");
 });
});
0
0
// Assuming the 1st span in the div is the one to be modified.
$(this).parent().$('span:eq(1)').html("You must be logged in to vote.");
// :eq(1) selects the first element that matches its selector.  You could
// also use ':first' in this case.
1
  • I think eq(1) will in fact return the second instance of that element since the jQuery object returns elements starting at the index of 0. Therefore, eq(0) will return the first element.
    – James
    Jan 1, 2009 at 21:35

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