It's actually quite easy (and very useful) to turn this into a simple jQuery plugin. Like so:
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/PPvG/huYRL/
Note that I've added support for moving the slider by entering a value into the #sliderValue
.
[ Code sample removed ]
You could also choose to remove #sliderValue
from the HTML and let the plugin create it for you. In that case, you would rewrite the plugin so it would be called on the slider, instead of on #sliderValue
. In my opinion, that would be a much neater solution.
Update
Based on your comments (and re-reading your question), I've rewritten the plugin example.
If I understand correctly, you want to do some calculations based on the value of the slider and display the result of those calculations in the label below the slider handle. The following should make that really easy.
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/PPvG/q5qg7/
HTML
<div id="slider"></div>
Plugin
(function($) {
$.fn.sliderLabel = function(options) {
var settings = $.extend({
marginTop: 2,
// Margin between the slider handle and the label (in pixels)
callback: function(value) {
return 'Value: ' + value;
}
}, options);
return this.each(function() { // <- maintains chainability
var slider = $(this);
var handle = slider.children('.ui-slider-handle');
var data = slider.data('sliderLabel');
if (handle.length === 0) {
// $(this) isn't a slider (it has no handle)
console.log('[SliderLabel] Error: sliderLabel() can only be called on a slider.');
return;
}
if (data === undefined) {
// First time sliderLabel() is called on this slider
data = {
label: $('<div class="ui-slider-label" />').css('position', 'absolute'),
callback: settings.callback
};
data.label.insertAfter(slider);
function updateLabel() {
var value = slider.slider('value');
var labelText = data.callback(value);
data.label.html(labelText);
data.label.css('top', handle.offset().top + handle.outerHeight() + settings.marginTop);
data.label.css('left', handle.offset().left - ((data.label.width() - handle.width()) / 2));
}
updateLabel();
slider.bind('slide', updateLabel);
} else {
// sliderLabel() was called before; just update the callback:
data.callback = settings.callback;
updateLabel();
}
// Save (or update) the data inside the slider:
slider.data('sliderLabel', data);
});
}
})(jQuery);
Usage
$("#slider").slider();
$("#slider").sliderLabel({
callback: function(value) {
return value + '%';
}
});
As you can see, the plugin is now called on the slider itself. You can now provide the plugin with a callback, which allows you to do some calculations and return a correctly formatted label (HTML is allowed).
In the example above, the callback simply takes the value
that is passed to the callbackand appends '%'
.