in general you can comma separate selectors.

$(".class1,#foo,td");

On Dec 3, 9:36 pm, light-blue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, perfect! Thanks!
>
> On Dec 3, 6:00 pm, "Jeffrey Kretz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I would recommend your elements having two classes.  One which stays the
> > same, and the second one which changes.
>
> > e.g.
>
> > <div class="jcalendar calendar0"></div>
> > <div class="jcalendar calendar1"></div>
> > <div class="jcalendar calendar2"></div>
> > <div class="jcalendar calendar3"></div>
>
> > Then you could grab it with
>
> > $('div.jcalendar');
>
> > JK
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
>
> > Behalf Of light-blue
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 5:40 PM
> > To: jQuery (English)
> > Subject: [jQuery] Targetting .class-0 .class-1 .class-2 .class-3
>
> > This is a beginner question. Does anyone know how to target
>
> > $('.jquery-calendar-0')
> > $('.jquery-calendar-1')
> > $('.jquery-calendar-2')
> > $('.jquery-calendar-3')
> > etc...
>
> > I need to run the following, where X is the number, but I don't know
> > how many X exist until after the page renders.
> > $('.jquery-calendar-X').calendar( {stuff} )
>
> > I can't find the solution in Learning Jquery (Chaffer and Swedberg),
> > at least not in Chapter 2 How to Get Anything You Want. ;-)
>
> > Thanks!

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