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EDIT: This is a more sound approach, since provided answer may have bugs when implementing a tags, or img tags.

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I am calling blog data from an API. (I've reformatted the data into an array by month).

So far, the blog titles print to the web page. I'd like a user to be able to click a title and have its description revealed.

Here is some of my code so far:

var blogPosts = $('#blog-posts');

    $.each(byMonth, function(key, value) {
      var outer = byMonth[key]

      $.each(outer, function(k, v) {
        var inner = outer[k]

        var monthBlogPosts = $('<div class = "month"> </div>').appendTo(blogPosts);

        $.each(inner, function(i, obj) {

          title = inner[i].Title
          description = inner[i].Description
          date = inner[i].DatePublished

          $('<div class = "title-list"><h3 class = "unique-title">' + title + '</h3></div>').appendTo(monthBlogPosts)

          // if a title is clicked, show its Description
          showDescription(description);

        })
      })
    });

    function showDescription(d){
      $('.unique-title').on('click', function(){
        $('<p>' + d + '</p>').appendTo('body')
        console.log(d)
      })
    }

When I click a title, all descriptions print instead of the matching description. I understand this is because I called the function in a nested loop, but I've also had trouble calling the description variable outside of it.

I have also tried

showDescription(title, description)

//...

function showDescription(t, d){
      $(title).on('click', function(){
        $('<p>' + d + '</p>').appendTo('body')
        console.log(d)
      })
    }

but then nothing is printed to the html page.

Essentially, I'd like to grab the title index, and print it's respective description when its clicked.

2
  • You are calling showDescription multiple times. And you are doing a global selector on the .unique-title. This is going to be creating duplicate bindings which is going to result in undesired behavior in your application. Only bind once.
    – Taplar
    Aug 15, 2018 at 20:23
  • You are appending a new p tag any time the title is clicked. Is this intended, or should there be at most one description displayed at any given time?
    – Taplar
    Aug 15, 2018 at 20:26

2 Answers 2

1

you should use event delegation to attach a click event to the document that will bubble up and trigger when .title-list is the event target.

$(document).on('click', '.title-list', function(event) { 
    showDescription(event.currentTarget) // pass the element being clicked (we will need it later)
})

you would also need to modify the way you get the description. you could store you description in a data attribute of .title-list like so:

$('<div class = "title-list" data-description="'+ description  +'"><h3 class = "unique-title">' + title + '</h3></div>').appendTo(monthBlogPosts)

so you can now modify showDescription() so it would get the data from the element we pass to the function

function showDescription(element){
    var d = $(element).data('description')
    $('<p>' + d + '</p>').appendTo('body')
    console.log(d)
  })
3
  • Thank you, this solution works. I had to make a minor edit from document.on to $(document).on
    – miranda
    Aug 15, 2018 at 21:00
  • @miranda Just a note. Instead of $(document) you can use closest available parent. With closest available parent, browser doesn't have to traverse through all the dom elements to reach till document. I am guess $('#blog-posts').on.... should work and should be faster.
    – bipen
    Aug 15, 2018 at 21:08
  • corrected my mistake on $(document), and yes the event should be attached to a common parent, preferably not document Aug 15, 2018 at 21:10
1

So ok. From whatever I could understand (by looking at your code). You cannot register an event with simple on for dynamically added element. You have to use on delegate.

Try this

1) remove the function call (inside a loop)

2) delete the entire function showDescription and add event as below:

 $('#blog-posts').on('click', '.unique-title',function(){
     alert('title clicked').
 });

3) As to display the description I think the best way will be to add the description in a div and hide it. Display it later once the title is clicked.

 (inside the loop)
 $('<div class = "desc" style="display:none">' + description + '</div>').appendTo(monthBlogPosts);

then on #2 above. Replace with this.

$('#blog-posts').on('click', '.unique-title',function(){
    $(this).next('.desc').show(); //I am assuming desc will be next to the clicked title here. You can modify it as needed.
});

Finally, this is just an overview of a code so might not work as expected but I am pretty sure this should give you an idea and get you started

1
  • The logic to this solution definitely makes sense. I think a $(document).ready is needed to make the show/hide functions work, which I didn't have.
    – miranda
    Aug 15, 2018 at 21:02

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