7

This may sound odd, but I'm working on a plugin that needs to find elements within a div, or the div itself.

The script finds an element based on a user selection, but the contents, including the markup is variable. So the script will look for the element as follows:

$('.block').find(selector); // selector set by user

but there isn't an easy way to have the selector select the '.block'. Selecting the parent before using find isn't a solution, as there are multiple '.block' elements.

I know extending the expr[":"] selector won't work as it is only looking for children. But, I did figure out a way to "duck punch" this method, by making a ':self' selector:

(function($){
    var orig = $.fn.find;

    $.fn.find = function(sel){
        return (sel === ':self') ? this : orig.call(this,sel);
    }

})(jQuery)

But this seems a bit over the top. And it will slow jQuery processing a tiny bit with every find function. Is there another way to do this?


Thanks for the answers! But I ended up doing this:

var b = $('.block'),
 el = (b.is(selector)) ? b : b.find(selector);
6
  • how about using .add(this) before the selector call. Without testing, would this add it to the list of "possible answers" that find can iterate? Mar 15, 2011 at 14:03
  • @Brad I don't think this is defined in there. It was a nice thought though! but it did get me thinking about trying .andSelf() but that didn't work either =(
    – Mottie
    Mar 15, 2011 at 14:18
  • @fudgey: I would say you have the best solution then. The hook isn't that much over-head, all things considered, but I may recommend return (this.is(sel) ? this : orig.call(this,sel)); A bit more intense, but won't restrict you to using ":self". Mar 15, 2011 at 14:22
  • @Brad sorry I haven't had my caffeine yet, what does that do? I only wanted to add ":self" and shouldn't that be $(this).is(sel)? but it's still not registering how that is better?
    – Mottie
    Mar 15, 2011 at 14:30
  • @fudgey: say that you have a div, with the class "foo" applied (<div class="foo"></div>). And this element is stored as el. Traditionally, performing $(el).find('.foo') won't return the div, but only child elements with the class foo. By adding a .is() check, you can return the current element in the match, as el would in-fact have foo applied (e.g. $(el).find('.foo') = el). -- I didn't know if you wanted to stick with using ":self" or not, it just gives you the flexibility of using "Traditional jQuery selectors" and applying them to the currently-selected element. Mar 15, 2011 at 14:52

6 Answers 6

11

approach with find('*') would be much more CPU intensive and I would recommend:

$('.block').find(selector).add($('.block').filter(selector));
2
  • 1
    +1 Thanks! but I think you meant add(). Anyway I actually ended up doing this: var b = $('.block'), el = (b.is(selector)) ? b : b.find(selector);
    – Mottie
    Mar 16, 2011 at 18:37
  • For a simpler, more performant generic solution: stackoverflow.com/a/18617975/357774
    – Noyo
    Sep 4, 2013 at 16:39
8

I came across this problem too. I solved it like this (basically Romans Malinovskis solution as a jquery plugin):

$.fn.findAll = function(selector) {
    return this.find(selector).add(this.filter(selector));
};
1
  • 1
    I prefer this approach. It is elegant and I think it is faster than the '*' solution mentioned above, although I did not do any tests. I also think functionality like this should be in the jQuery core. Mar 22, 2012 at 13:35
6

EDITED:

You can use the all selector '*' combined with andSelf to get a selection containing an element with all its children and subchildren. Then you can filter() that selection on the chosen selector.

<style type="text/css">li {background-color: white;}</style>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function () {
  $('div').find('*').andSelf().filter(selector).css('background-color','blue');
}
</script>
<div>
This is a test
  <ul>
    <li class="test">This is a test</li>
    <li>This is a test</li>
    <li class="test">This is a test</li>
    <li>This is a test</li>
    <li class="test">This is a test</li>
    <li>This is a test</li>
  </ul>
</div>

Should change the backgrounds of all the .test objects, as well as the initial div that was selected, if it's appropriate. I'm not sure about the performance of my answer though.

Example: http://jsfiddle.net/7A9JJ/2/

EDIT Or you could just do $('div, div *').filter(selector);

3
  • Since the user sets the selector .test (in your example), if it was replaced with just li:first then it would make the div as well as the first li blue, and this is not desired.
    – Mottie
    Mar 15, 2011 at 15:11
  • @fudgey Ah! I see. Give me a moment. Mar 15, 2011 at 16:01
  • Nice... a bit convoluted, but it works nonetheless. Thank you!
    – Mottie
    Mar 15, 2011 at 16:39
2

Since 1.8 you can do

$('.block').find(selector).addBack(selector);
2
  • Sorry, this won't work because if the selector finds the target, it should only return the target, not both the target and the .block which is what the addBack() does - see this demo.
    – Mottie
    Jun 24, 2014 at 23:58
  • @Mottie Duplicating the selector filter in addBack is important. Without that, it won't work. See here
    – Eva
    Jun 25, 2014 at 0:38
1

I'm not sure why this needs to be so complicated. This can all be done with a simple multiple selector:

$(selector + '.block, .block ' + selector);

No find, filter, nor add to think about, plus it's more performant in many (most?) modern browsers (tested with jQuery 1.9).

Caveats:

  • You may want to trim the user-supplied selector beforehand, since trailing spaces would have meaning here;
  • This solution is somewhat specific to the OP's question and would not work if the target div's selector began with an element name, i.e. selector + 'th, th ' + selector would not yield a valid selector; in such cases I would recommend using one of the more generic solutions;
  • You could still stick to the multiple-selector approach with an EXTREMELY HACKY, NOT AT ALL RECOMMENDED approach that involves using the :not() pseudoselector: see working demo and horrible, horrible performance.
4
  • it's a nice solution but since the user is providing the selector it could possibly be '.block'... so '.block .block' wouldn't work.
    – Mottie
    Sep 5, 2013 at 14:20
  • @Mottie, yes it would, actually: jsfiddle.net/LTeMy Did I misunderstand your concern?
    – Noyo
    Sep 5, 2013 at 14:58
  • In my case, I am using table headers so instead of .block I would need th and therefore the selector cannot also be th (demo).
    – Mottie
    Sep 5, 2013 at 15:37
  • Ah, then that's a different question. :] I was answering the one where selector was the user input and '.block' was the selector for your target containing divs. The other answers are more generic/appropriate in the case where your own target selector begins with an element name, and I can update the answer to clarify this. Still -- just for fun! -- if you wanted to stick to the "single compound selector" approach you could use nested :not() pseudoselectors: working demo and why you really shouldn't.
    – Noyo
    Sep 5, 2013 at 16:38
0

I create jquery method findAll like below

$.fn.findAll = function ( selector ) {
    if ( this.length === 0 ) {
        return this;
    } else if ( this.length === 1 ) {
        return this.filter( selector ).add( this.find( selector ) );
    } else {
        var rtn = this.filter( selector );
        this.each( function () {
            rtn.add( $( this ).find( selector ) );
        } );
        return rtn;
    }
}

you can use it like below

$resultSet.findAll(selector)
1
  • You don't need the different this.length cases, especially the length > 1 look quite involved. Omnimike's implementation works correctly and probably efficient: jsfiddle.net/uKH9b
    – Jaap
    Apr 16, 2013 at 13:29

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