9

I am trying to setup a rotating panel, however I have three states: active, inactive, disabled.

I only want to rotate between active and inactive panels and skip over disabled panels. If there is no more inactive panels rotate back to the first panel.

However with the code below you click the button it will select panel1, then panel 2, and back to panel 1, not selecting panel5.. If I remove the not selector from bold part below it works as expected. I think it's my understanding (or lack thereof) of the next operator. Any thoughts?

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title></title>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.7.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>  
<script type="text/javascript">
    $(function () {
        $("#rotate").click(function () {
            var ActivePanel = $('.active');                 //Get the current active panel 
            var NextPanel = $('.active').next('.inactive:not(.disabled)'); //Get the next panel to be active. 
            if (NextPanel.length == 0) NextPanel = $("#panel1"); //check for null next. if so, rotate back to the first panel

            console.log("Active Panel: ", ActivePanel);
            console.log("Next Panel: ", NextPanel);

            $(ActivePanel).removeClass("active").addClass("inactive");
            $(NextPanel).removeClass("inactive").addClass("active"); 
        });
    });    
    </script>
</head>
<body>
    <button id="rotate">Rotate Active Panel</button>
    <div id="panel1" class="active"><p>Some Content</p></div>
<div id="panel2" class="inactive"></div>
<div id="panel3" class="inactive disabled"></div>
<div id="panel4" class="inactive disabled"></div>
<div id="panel5" class="inactive"></div>
</body>
</html>

3 Answers 3

6

The next method only returns the immediate sibling if it matches the selector. Use the nextAll method.

Try the following:

$("#rotate").click(function() {
  var activePanel = $('.active'); //Get the current active panel 
  var nextPanel = activePanel.nextAll('.inactive').not('.disabled').first(); //Get the next panel to be active. 
  if (!nextPanel.length) {
    nextPanel = $("#panel1"); //check for null next. if so, rotate back to the first panel
  }

  console.log("Active Panel: ", activePanel);
  console.log("Next Panel: ", nextPanel);

  $(activePanel).removeClass("active").addClass("inactive");
  $(nextPanel).removeClass("inactive").addClass("active");
});

See here for jsFiddle.

2
  • This just rotates between panel1 and panel2. Dec 2, 2011 at 17:02
  • @rich.okelly: your answer helped me a LOT! Thanks for posting... it gave me an idea on how I should approach my current scenario (Wizard with next/previous buttons). I needed to rotate to the next not answered question! AWESOME. It's working now... :) Jul 19, 2012 at 0:51
2

try using the next siblings ~ selector followed by a nested .class, :not(.class) and :first selector

$("#rotate").click(function() {
    var ActivePanel = $('.active');
    var NextPanel = $(".active ~ .inactive:not(.disabled):first");
    if (NextPanel.length == 0) NextPanel = $("#panel1");    
    $(ActivePanel).removeClass("active").addClass("inactive");
    $(NextPanel).removeClass("inactive").addClass("active");
});

Working Example: http://jsfiddle.net/hunter/vfVBB/


Next Siblings Selector (“prev ~ siblings”)

Description: Selects all sibling elements that follow after the "prev" element, have the same parent, and match the filtering "siblings" selector.

4
  • This works but I don't understand why this doesn't work: var NextPanel = $(".active").siblings(".inactive:not(.disabled):first"); Dec 2, 2011 at 17:13
  • 1
    .siblings() takes all of that elements siblings, before or after. This is why the 1st elements selects the 2nd element and the 2nd element selects the 1st.
    – hunter
    Dec 2, 2011 at 17:16
  • 1
    Yes I see now. Thanks for teaching me the '~' selector. 10 points for gryffindor. For those interested the documentation is here: api.jquery.com/next-siblings-selector Dec 2, 2011 at 17:21
  • So this is similar to nextAll in nature. Dec 2, 2011 at 19:20
1

Yet another way to do it

.nextAll(".inactive:not(.disabled):first")

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