I'm wondering what the best way is to find children of an element in jQuery, but also include the parent in the 'find'.
Here's my simplified basic HTML setup:
<div id="container">
<form id="form1"> <!-- form 1 content --> </form>
<form id="form2"> <!-- form 2 content --> </form>
</div>
And I want a function like this...
function getForms ($container)
{
// Option 1
var $allForms = $container.find('form').andSelf().filter('form');
// Option 2
var $allForms = $container.find('form');
if ($container.is('form')) $allForms.add($container);
// Should return all the forms in the container if passed $('#container')
// Or return just one form if passed $('#form1')
return $allForms;
}
I'm fairly certain that both option 1 or 2 will work. Does anyone know which option above is more efficient? Are there other options which are more elegant or more efficient?
EDIT: I wasn't happy with the .is() in option 2 because it didn't work when the container had multiple jQuery objects in it. So I came up with something like this:
// Option 3
function getContainerElements ($container, selector) {
return $container.find(selector).add($container.filter(selector));
}
I haven't tested it too much, but I think it'll work for all general cases.
var $allForms = $container.find('form').andSelf()
$container
may or may not be a form.<form>
elements always immediate children of$container
, or do you want to also support descendants?