It's mentioned in the release notes of 1.2.1:

http://docs.jquery.com/Release:jQuery_1.2.1#.eq.28.29

--Karl

____________
Karl Swedberg
www.englishrules.com
www.learningjquery.com




On Dec 8, 2008, at 11:30 AM, Brad wrote:


Thanks for the confirmation. Maybe 
http://docs.jquery.com/Release:jQuery_1.2#Removed_Functionality
should be revised to indicate that it was restored, unlike lt() and gt
()?

On Dec 8, 9:28 am, ricardobeat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
eq() is present in 1.2.6, you won't face any issues using it.

- ricardo

On Dec 8, 2:13 pm, Brad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I'm making some modifications to an older project that originally used jQuery 1.1.2. I've installed 1.2.6 and am in the process of reviewing
and upgrading the code based on the changes documented 
athttp://docs.jquery.com/Release:jQuery_1.2#Removed_Functionality

There are many places in this project where .eq(n) is used. From
reading this group I've seen that .eq( ) went away with 1.2 but was
brought back in 1.2.1? I also don't see any mention of .eq being
deprecated in the latest docs athttp://docs.jquery.com/Traversing/eq#index .

Do I still need replace all instances of .eq with .slice? IMO, .eq
reads easier.

If I do, then for any integer n I simply replace .eq(n) with .slice(n,
1)?

Thanks

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