36

I am trying to use an 'if' statement to determine which element was clicked.

Basically I am trying to code something along the lines of:

if (the element clicked is '#news_gallery li .over') {
    var article = $('#news-article .news-article');
} else if (the element clicked is '#work_gallery li .over') {
    var article = $('#work-article .work-article');
} else if (the element clicked is '#search-item li') {
    var article = $('#search-item .search-article');
};

What is the proper jQuery syntax for this? Many thanks in advance.

5
  • How are you setting up your click handler? May 22, 2012 at 17:20
  • 1
    @vision: "along the lines of", e.g. it's pseudo-code
    – Marc B
    May 22, 2012 at 17:22
  • Tons of these snippet codes are present on internet. First search then ask.
    – Alireza
    May 22, 2012 at 17:24
  • @MarcB Right, I skipped that words and stared into the code block which was totally different at that time. Now of course my comment is obsolete.
    – VisioN
    May 22, 2012 at 17:26
  • Why don't you just simple use a global variable? what's the problem with that?
    – Oscar Jara
    May 22, 2012 at 17:42

7 Answers 7

72

Use this, I think I can get your idea.

Live demo: http://jsfiddle.net/oscarj24/h722g/1/

$('body').click(function(e) {

    var target = $(e.target), article;

    if (target.is('#news_gallery li .over')) {
       article = $('#news-article .news-article');
    } else if (target.is('#work_gallery li .over')) {
       article = $('#work-article .work-article');
    } else if (target.is('#search-item li')) {
       article = $('#search-item .search-article');
    }

    if (article) {
       // Do Something
    }
});​
3
  • "var target = $(e.target), article; " What does ", article" do here? Sep 5, 2018 at 15:41
  • @masteroleary that's just a variable declaration because the OP needs to evaluate a CSS class from the clicked item (target) in order to pick another one which is stored in the article variable.
    – Oscar Jara
    Sep 5, 2018 at 16:34
  • 1
    @OscarJara so its initializing article as undefined? The real question is: how have I not come across this in 15 years??? Sep 10, 2018 at 20:54
21

So you are doing this a bit backwards. Typically you'd do something like this:

​<div class='article'>
  Article 1
</div>
<div class='article'>
  Article 2
</div>
<div class='article'>
  Article 3
</div>​

And then in your jQuery:

$('.article').click(function(){
    article = $(this).text(); //$(this) is what you clicked!
    });​

When I see things like #search-item .search-article, #search-item .search-article, and #search-item .search-article I sense you are overspecifying your CSS which makes writing concise jQuery very difficult. This should be avoided if at all possible.

1
  • 3
    Just a small tip for anyone else who reads this answer in the future: Use console.log($(this).get()) in case you're not sure whether $(this) is selecting what you expect. This will print a list of selected elements for you in the console log.
    – aderchox
    Mar 18, 2020 at 14:11
11

Answer from vpiTriumph lays out the details nicely.
Here's a small handy variation for when there are unique element ids for the data set you want to access:

$('.news-article').click(function(event){    
    var id = event.target.id;
    console.log('id = ' + id); 
});
1
  • Nice, event usage! Note, you forgot to pass in event to function, i.e., function(event), getting "event is undefined" otherwise. Aug 22, 2018 at 18:22
4

Another option can be to utilize the tagName property of the e.target. It doesn't apply exactly here, but let's say I have a class of something that's applied to either a DIV or an A tag, and I want to see if that class was clicked, and determine whether it was the DIV or the A that was clicked. I can do something like:

$('.example-class').click(function(e){
  if ((e.target.tagName.toLowerCase()) == 'a') {
    console.log('You clicked an A element.');
  } else { // DIV, we assume in this example
    console.log('You clicked a DIV element.');
  }
});
3

The basis of jQuery is the ability to find items in the DOM through selectors, and then checking properties on those selectors. Read up on Selectors here:

http://api.jquery.com/category/selectors/

However, it would make more sense to create event handlers for the click events for the different functionality that should occur based on what is clicked.

2

Hope this useful for you.

$(document).click(function(e){
    if ($('#news_gallery').on('clicked')) {
        var article = $('#news-article .news-article');
    }  
});
1
$("#news_gallery li .over").click(function() {
    article = $("#news-article .news-article");
});
1
  • Unfortuantely setting up 3 different functions won't work. I am basically using the variable for a kind of 'lightbox' gallery, so the variable needs to reside within a single click function that animates the entire 'lightbox'. May 22, 2012 at 17:27

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