function xmlParser(xml, projectName) {
var currentIndex = 0;
$(xml).find('entry').each(function(){
if($(this).attr('projectName').toLowerCase() == projectName) {
$previous = $(xml).find('entry')[currentIndex - 1]);
$project = $(this);
$next = $(xml).find('entry')[currentIndex + 1]);
//do something with these objects..
}
currentIndex++;
});
}
Here is some sample code. I have an XML file full of 'entry' elements. Each element has a 'projectName' attribute.
The code basically scans the XML for a project name, like say "Magic Giraffes", returns the XML element matching it, and also the previous & next projects. It works... but I want to know if it's the most efficient way to do it.
See how I'm handling the $previous and $next parts? It's calling the .find() function two more times, and then grabbing elements based on the (-1) and (+1) of the current index. Is there a more efficient way to do this?
var $entries = $(xml).find('entry')
etc.