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“I wrote a “Grep in Project” command that combines the speed of grep with a decent, well-integrated UI.” Oh wow. Just what I’ve needed.
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Brian May finishes writing up; now he’s just waiting on the Viva. Good for him.(tags: science)
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“It handled it fine, right up until the time you tried to print, and then IE choked on it.” IE doesn’t like the name ‘tags’ in documents it’s printing.
jQuery: passing elements to event handlers
03 August 2007
It’s fairly common practice in jQuery to bind events to a quick anonymous function that performs the action you desire. But how do you bind an event to a non-anonymous function – something that you’ve already extracted into a function so as to avoid reptition? I learned this one the hard way, and thought it was worth sharing.
I was working on some jQuery to apply to some legacy HTML at work, and was fiddling around to see if our goal was possible.
I was working on a “springy” archive menu. There are some headers and some lists; the lists are hidden on pageload, and when you click on a header, the subsequent list (ie the archive for that year) opens. Many lists can be open or closed at once. In addition, we toggle a class on the header (rather than the header link, which is there purely out of legacy code for now) to change an image, indicating that it’s open.
Here’s my proof of concept code – my first working version to demonstrate how this functionality would work.
$(document).ready(function() {
var headlinks = $("div.container h3 a");
for (var i=0; i < headlinks.length; i++) {
$(headlinks[i]).bind("click", function() {
$(this).parent().next().toggle();
$(this).parent().toggleClass("open");
});
$(headlinks[i]).parent().next().toggle();
$(headlinks[i]).parent().toggleClass("open");
};
toggleArchiveLinks(headlinks[0]);
$(headlinks[0]).parent().next().toggle();
$(headlinks[0]).parent().toggleClass("open");
});
Now we've got the code working, it's time to refactor. There's a lot of repetition going on - three instances of that "toggle visibility and toggle class" behaviour, so let's pull that out into a function:
function toggleArchiveLinks(element) {
$(element).parent().next().toggle();
$(element).parent().toggleClass("open");
return false;
}
Much better. Unfortunately, we can't replace our anonymous function within that bind
directive with this. I initially thought you could bind "click" to toggleArchiveLinks(this)
. But that doesn't work, because in the context of events, what gets passed out to another function is the event object itself. (I think it works fine in the anonymous object due to the way things are scoped).
But it's a bit ugly to refactor some, but not all of the code. After looking at the jQuery docs for bind
, it turns out that there's a third parameter you can pass in: a data object. This is made available to a handler function. So that means we can pass information about the element we want to toggle to a handler event. We write our new bind directive like this:
$(headlinks[i]).bind("click", {element: headlinks[i]}, handleToggleEvent);
That object in the middle will be made available to a new function handleToggleEvent
. (We could, of course, pass as many key/value pairs as we wanted to to the function). We also need to write handleToggleEvent
. That function looks like this:
function handleToggleEvent(event) {
toggleArchiveLinks(event.data.element);
event.preventDefault();
}
The function accepts an event as a parameter, and the object/hash from our bind
statement is available as event.data
. We're then free to call toggleArchiveLinks
on the element of our choosing. Finally, we have to call event.preventDefault
in order to stop the event propagating any further. If we don't do this, the bound behaviour will happen, and then the link will click through as normal. return false;
won't work here, because we're actually dealing with the event itself, not just an anonymous function.
So we've now managed to refactor some repetitive code and call it from a bind
statement. Our final jQuery script looks like this:
$(document).ready(function() {
var headlinks = $("div.container h3 a");
for (var i=0; i < headlinks.length; i++) {
$(headlinks[i]).bind("click", {element: headlinks[i]}, handleToggleEvent);
toggleArchiveLinks(headlinks[i]);
};
toggleArchiveLinks(headlinks[0]);
});
function toggleArchiveLinks(element) {
$(element).parent().next().toggle();
$(element).parent().toggleClass("open");
return false;
}
function handleToggleEvent(event) {
toggleArchiveLinks(event.data.element);
event.preventDefault();
}
Which is much better, I think.
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As mentioned on, I think, Metafilter. Lovely, old-fashioned, hypertext writing.
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Great write-up and series of notes on Bill Buxton’s book, by Michal Migurski
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“Others have complained that the third valve is used only at the expert level, that even proficient players only score a maximum of 60 points per song, and that the “oompah” meter stays the same shade of gray even if every note is hit.”
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“MileMarker adds a helper for marking page elements with the milestone they are slated to be developed, and makes them unable to be interacted with.” The JS-y approach isn’t quite how I’d do it, but it’s a neat idea.
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“I suspect designing for the Web instead of around it is at least as important as language choice.”
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Beautiful: “Anymails is a visualization of my received emails… An unread email is hairy and swims fast; a read email has less hair and does not swim so fast anymore; a responded email is hairless and barely moves.”
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“Today we’re happy to announce that we are adding support for the hCard microformat to Google Maps results.”
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“Brian “Box” Brown issued me a challenge to draw 200 bad comics. As a gentleman and a scholar, I had no choice but to oblige.”
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Getting Practice Done. A bit metric/exercise focused for my liking, but maybe worth checking out.
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Sneak peek of Jon Favreau’s “Iron Man” from San DIego Comicon. It looks, in a word, awesome.
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Beautiful set of stills from the Modesty Blaise movie. Looks suitably camp/erotic by turns; I’ve only read the books and glanced at the comics.