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 = $('.block'),
el = (b.is(selector)) ? b : b.find(selector);
.add(this)
before the selector call. Without testing, would this add it to the list of "possible answers" that find can iterate?this
is defined in there. It was a nice thought though! but it did get me thinking about trying.andSelf()
but that didn't work either =(return (this.is(sel) ? this : orig.call(this,sel));
A bit more intense, but won't restrict you to using ":self".$(this).is(sel)
? but it's still not registering how that is better?<div class="foo"></div>
). And this element is stored asel
. 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.