2

I have included a header to my files as in include. In the header is the nav bar.

How do I, using jQuery, apply class="active" to the relevant li.

The only way I could think of doing it is to set a variable on the actual pages, apply an id that is equal to that variable of the relevant page and if function so if they match apply a class to the li.

However, I thought there must be a simpler way of achieving this.

<ul class="nav nav-pills right" id="div">
    <li id="home" class="active">
       <a href="index.php">Home</a>
    </li>
    <li id="search">
       <a href="search.php">Search</a>
    </li>
    <li id="contact">
      <a href="contact.php">Contact</a>
    </li>
</ul>
2
  • I'm guessing this html is generated server side, and you are wanting to set the active nav element from within a template of some sort. You pretty much have the idea of how to do it already.
    – Chad
    Jan 18, 2013 at 23:02
  • check my answer below, works in all cases regardless of if you have "#data" or "?data=test" at the end of your url..
    – insomiac
    Jan 18, 2013 at 23:17

7 Answers 7

4

An easy way to do this would be to have a script per page:

$('#home').addClass('active'); // for home page

You could try and match the href to the current url:

var path = window.location.pathname.substring(1);
$('.nav>li>a[href="' + path + '"]').parent().addClass('active');
2
  • how would that be written without jquery? with ID not class to make it easier! document.getElementId('nav>li>a[href="' + path + '"]').parent().addClass('active'); = document.getElementId is not a function
    – Jon
    Jul 21, 2013 at 14:49
  • @Jon. This is about the easiest way. The method you're looking for is .getElementById but it doesn't support selectors, only Ids. JS for HTML5 comes with a new selectors feature set but I'd stick with jQuery for legacy compatibility. Jul 23, 2013 at 7:53
4

More compact way:

$(function(){
    var sPath = window.location.pathname;
    var sPage = sPath.substring(sPath.lastIndexOf('/') + 1);
    $('a[href="'+ sPage +'"]').parent().addClass('active');
});
3

As soon as the page loads it will run this code:

$(document).ready(function(){
    $('li').removeClass('active');
    $('li a').each(function() {
       $found = $.contains($(this).prop("href"),location.pathname);
       if ($found) {
           $(this).closest('li').addClass('active');
           break;
        }
    });
});

OR

You can also do this using regex :

$(document).ready(function(){
    $('li').removeClass('active');
     var regex = /[a-z]+.php/g; 
     var input = location.pathname; 
        if(regex.test(input)) {
           var matches = input.match(regex);
           $('a[href="'+matches[0]+'"]').closest('li').addClass('active');
        }
});

You might need to have the similar id name to that of php file.

Check the demo here : Demo

2
  • why this loop when you have selector for any attributes in jquery?
    – JohnJohnGa
    Jan 18, 2013 at 23:10
  • There might be many times that your url might have hash or ? . which will be problematic in such situations.
    – insomiac
    Jan 18, 2013 at 23:16
1

You can do this:

//remove the active class from all items, if there is any
$('.nav>li').removeClass('active');

//finally, add the active class to the current item
$('a[href='+ location.pathname.substring(1) +']').parent().addClass('active');
0

You could use javascript to find the current list item based on the url, by adding the class to the right list item after the DOM has been loaded (e.g. string manipulation of window.location together with JQuery selectors and addClass())

0

I found a routine to set active (current) class on my shared menu, but I need to modify it to set the parent link only, and not the 'closest' link. It works great on menu items with no sub menus, but when a sub menu item is clicked, there is not indication on the main menu after page load. (the code I need to modify is below)

(function( $ ) { $.fn.activeNavigation = function(selector) { var pathname = window.location.pathname var extension_position; var href; var hrefs = [] $(selector).find("a").each(function(){ // Remove href file extension extension_position = $(this).attr("href").lastIndexOf('.'); href = (extension_position >= 0) ? $(this).attr("href").substr(0, extension_position) : $(this).attr("href");

        if (pathname.indexOf(href) > -1) {
            hrefs.push($(this));
        }
    })
    if (hrefs.length) {
        hrefs.sort(function(a,b){
            return b.attr("href").length - a.attr("href").length
        })
      hrefs[0].closest('li').addClass("current")
    }
}; })(jQuery);
0

If someone still checks on google how to do it here is my solution

var path = window.location.href; // full url 
$('a[href="'+ path +'"]').parent().addClass('active'); // find by selector url

HTML

<ul class="navbar-nav mr-auto">
    <li class="nav-item">
        <a class="nav-link" href="http://example.com/">Home</a>
    </li>
    <li class="nav-item">
        <a class="nav-link" href="http://example.com/history"> History</a>
    </li>
</ul>

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