97

Can you help me with this jQuery selector?

$(".auctiondiv .auctiondivleftcontainer .countdown").each(function () {
    var newValue = parseInt($(this).text(), 10) - 1;
    $(this).text(newValue);

    if (newValue == 0) {
        $(this).parent().fadeOut();
        chat.verify($(this).parent().parent().attr('id'));
    }
});

Basically, I want to select the element with .bidbutton class that belongs in the same parent as the .countdown in the each loop:

<div class="auctiondivleftcontainer">
    <p class="countdown">0</p>
    <button class="btn primary bidbutton">Lance</button>                            
</div>  

And then apply this to that button:

$(button here).addClass("disabled");
$(button here).attr("disabled", "");

10 Answers 10

170

Use jQuery .siblings() to select the matching sibling.

$(this).siblings('.bidbutton');
2
  • 5
    Siblings() returns an array of all of the elements that match said selector.
    – Luke
    May 20, 2015 at 18:13
  • 3
    How to get all siblings but not this ?
    – melvin
    Mar 22, 2018 at 5:44
7
$(this).siblings(".bidbutton")
6
$("h2").siblings().css({"color": "blue"});
4
you can use 
$(this).siblings(".bidbutton").addClass("disabled");
$(this).siblings(".bidbutton").attr("disabled","");
4
$("selector").nextAll(); 
$("selector").prev(); 

you can also find an element using Jquery selector

$("h2").siblings('table').find('tr'); 
1

If you want to select a specific sibling:

var $sibling = $(this).siblings('.bidbutton')[index];

where 'index' is the index of the specific sibling within the parent container.

1
  • Only useful if you know the index ahead of time.
    – TylerH
    Oct 22, 2020 at 16:05
0

Since $(this) refers to .countdown you can use $(this).next() or $(this).next('button') more specifically.

2
  • 1
    And what if it isn't right next to him? what if it's behind him? Use the more general siblings solution. Sep 18, 2011 at 17:53
  • 2
    Amazingly, it IS in his provided DOM and there's no reason to traverse ALL the siblings if he doesn't have to. Sep 18, 2011 at 17:55
0

Try -

   $(this).siblings(".bidbutton").addClass("disabled").attr("disabled", "");
0

also if you need to select a sibling with a name rather than the class, you could use the following

var $sibling = $(this).siblings('input[name=bidbutton]');
0

If I understood that correctly you're already in a loop (each) so you would always want to select that one sibling button inside each loop runthrough? Since siblings() returns an array, this would be the way to go:

$(this).siblings('.bidbutton')[0]

You can apply both things you wanted in a single line doing this:

$(this).siblings('.bidbutton')[0].addClass("disabled").attr("disabled", "");

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