767

I have a load of divs with the class testimonial and I want to use jquery to loop through them to check for each div if a specific condition is true. If it is true, it should perform an action.

Does anyone know how I would do this?

0

15 Answers 15

1360

Use each: 'i' is the postion in the array, obj is the DOM object that you are iterating (can be accessed through the jQuery wrapper $(this) as well).

$('.testimonial').each(function(i, obj) {
    //test
});

Check the api reference for more information.

9
  • 3
    The function with i, obj parameters helps a lot. If just each was used then it was not iterating. Jun 28, 2012 at 16:22
  • 2
    @Darwindeeds correct! The function is used by the actual iterator to process each item. Returning false will stop iteration. Jun 29, 2012 at 7:09
  • 194
    It is worth pointing out, that "obj" will be the dom object, while $(this) is the jQuery object.
    – AndreasT
    Sep 11, 2012 at 10:50
  • Cant we do jQuery(this 'ul li').length to get length of that elements ul li?
    – techie_28
    Sep 21, 2012 at 6:09
  • 22
    +1 for suggesting $(this) to access the object... obj being DOM object doesn't allow to attach functions directly for example obj.empty()
    – Fr0zenFyr
    Nov 17, 2015 at 7:34
166

try this...

$('.testimonial').each(function(){
    //if statement here 
    // use $(this) to reference the current div in the loop
    //you can try something like...


    if(condition){

    }


 });
1
  • 8
    FYI: break; will not break. You must use return false; Dec 18, 2017 at 20:18
72

It's pretty simple to do this without jQuery these days.

Without jQuery:

Just select the elements and use the .forEach() method to iterate over them:

const elements = document.querySelectorAll('.testimonial');
Array.from(elements).forEach((element, index) => {
  // conditional logic here.. access element
});

In older browsers:

var testimonials = document.querySelectorAll('.testimonial');
Array.prototype.forEach.call(testimonials, function(element, index) {
  // conditional logic here.. access element
});
54

Try this example

Html

<div class="testimonial" data-index="1">
    Testimonial 1
</div>
<div class="testimonial" data-index="2">
    Testimonial 2
</div>
<div class="testimonial" data-index="3">
    Testimonial 3
</div>
<div class="testimonial" data-index="4">
    Testimonial 4
</div>
<div class="testimonial" data-index="5">
    Testimonial 5
</div>

When we want to access those divs which has data-index greater than 2 then we need this jquery.

$('div[class="testimonial"]').each(function(index,item){
    if(parseInt($(item).data('index'))>2){
        $(item).html('Testimonial '+(index+1)+' by each loop');
    }
});

Working example fiddle

0
33

you can do it this way

$('.testimonial').each(function(index, obj){
    //you can use this to access the current item
});
27

jQuery's .eq() can help you traverse through elements with an indexed approach.

var testimonialElements = $(".testimonial");
for(var i=0; i<testimonialElements.length; i++){
    var element = testimonialElements.eq(i);
    //do something with element
}
1
  • 1
    this is the most efficient approach indeed. Jan 20, 2017 at 1:00
26

I may be missing part of the question, but I believe you can simply do this:

$('.testimonial').each((index, element) => {
    if (/* Condition */) {
        // Do Something
    }
});

This uses jQuery's each method: https://learn.jquery.com/using-jquery-core/iterating/

20
divs  = $('.testimonial')
for(ind in divs){
  div = divs[ind];
  //do whatever you want
}
2
  • that doesn't give you the jquery objects though, just dom elements
    – celwell
    Feb 3, 2014 at 19:25
  • 2
    @celwell can't expect jQuery to do everything for you. It is a matter of making your own jQuery Object $(ind).
    – GoldBishop
    Nov 17, 2017 at 17:34
18

With a simple for loop:

var testimonials= $('.testimonial');
for (var i = 0; i < testimonials.length; i++) {
  // Using $() to re-wrap the element.
  $(testimonials[i]).text('a');
}
17

You can do this concisely using .filter. The following example will hide all .testimonial divs containing the word "something":

$(".testimonial").filter(function() {
    return $(this).text().toLowerCase().indexOf("something") !== -1;
}).hide();
10

Without jQuery updated

document.querySelectorAll('.testimonial').forEach(function (element, index) {
    element.innerHTML = 'Testimonial ' + (index + 1);
});
<div class="testimonial"></div>
<div class="testimonial"></div>

1
  • almost the same answer is already here, I think you should edit existing Oct 3, 2017 at 8:18
10

You could use the jQuery $each method to loop through all the elements with class testimonial. i => is the index of the element in collection and val gives you the object of that particular element and you can use "val" to further access the properties of your element and check your condition.

$.each($('.testimonal'), function(i, val) { 
    if(your condition){
       //your action
    }
});
8

In JavaScript ES6 .forEach() over an array-like NodeList collection given by Element.querySelectorAll()

document.querySelectorAll(".testimonial").forEach((el, idx) => {
  el.style.color = "red";
  console.log(`${idx} Element ${el.tagName} with ID #${el.id} says: ${el.textContent}` );
});
<p class="testimonial" id="1">This is some text</p>
<div class="testimonial" id="2">Lorem ipsum</div>

2
  • The spread operator + array notation is not needed, surely doing doc..torAll.forEach() would suffice?
    – alistair
    Jul 10, 2019 at 19:25
  • Thank you. Absolutely. [...ArrayLike] was used for the time querySelectorAll didn't had support for .forEach. @aabbccsmith Jul 11, 2019 at 11:32
7
$('.testimonal').each(function(i,v){
  if (condition) {
    doSomething();
  }
});
4

More precise:

$.each($('.testimonal'), function(index, value) { 
    console.log(index + ':' + value); 
});
1
  • This is nice if you like reading/writing from a more functional perspective.
    – Sgnl
    Aug 29, 2017 at 21:18

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