Thanks Karl.
Consider thread closed
SJ
On 21 Jan 2007, at 8:45, Karl Rudd wrote:
Yes Steve an element can have "two classes". :) The "class" attribute
of an element contains a list of space seperated "words". Think of
them more has "tags" rather than actual "OO programming" classes.
Karl Rudd
On 1/21/07, Steve Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A question about toggleClass... everything below works, so its not a
problem as such...
http://www.g-raff.co.uk/jquery/basic.html
I added a statement to the code to change the appearance of headings
that had been clicked, and back again when they were clicked a second
time.
function init() {
// set first section to be open on launch
$("a.open_btn:eq(0)").toggleClass("down_state");
// now iterate through <a class="open_btn"> objects to add
click
methods to open corresponding <div class="section">
$("a.open_btn").each(function(index) {
$(this).click(function() {
$(this).toggleClass("down_state");
$('div.expandedSection:eq(' + index +
')').slideToggle("normal");
return false;
});
});
};
What I'm wondering about are the inner workings of toggleClass.
In the script above, I have applied the click method to all instances
of a.open_btn - but of course when it's clicked, there is a "change
of class" to .down_state - yet the click method still works.
I'm just wondering how the toggleClass method is implemented, as this
seems like voodoo to me - an element can't have 2 classes, can it?
Yet, when an "a.open_btn" becomes "a.down_state", it still retains
the click methods belonging to instances of "a.open_btn" - don't get
me wrong, I'm glad it works! But I'd prefer to understand WHY it
works.
I think I might give up Flash. This is too good...
Cheers
SJ
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