Two questions? Wouldn't I have to still pass a value for i for each instantiation of an li? Or do I not quite understand how this works? Basically could you explain how this works a little bit so that I fully understand the jQuery and JS behind it. I would really appreciate that.
The other question is pretty close to the first question. For implementing this, I know I would most likely have to put this code after the superfish call in the document.ready part of the code? I believe I understand that the first post would be called with each li but it looks like it would be looking at the parent item instead of the brother items. I guess both questions really just fall to a little bit more explanation of how these functions would work, but thanks Ricardo! I have a couple other tasks to tackle right now but I will probably be able to give this a shot tomorrow and give more feedback then. ~Aaron On Sep 23, 2:09 pm, ricardobeat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > or better yet (thanks Eric!): > > $('#menu li').each(function(i){ > $(this).css('z-index',10-i); > > }); > > - ricardo > > On Sep 23, 3:06 pm, ricardobeat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > $('#menu li').each(function(){ > > var zindex = 10 - $(this).parent().find('li').index(this); > > $(this).css('z-index',zindex); > > > }); > > > On Sep 23, 10:12 am, Aaron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > Unfortunately I don't understand the jQuery enough to put something > > > like that together. Anyone else understand it enough to give this a > > > whirl? > > > > Aaron > > > > On Sep 22, 9:55 pm, "Joel Birch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > Your solution for fixing this incarnation of the IE z-index bug is > > > > actually the only one I have ever come across, so whilst it is hacky, > > > > it's probably as good as you are going to get. I guess a nifty bit of > > > > jQuery could make applying the z-indexes easier and keep the source > > > > HTML clean. If anyone wants to give that a go please share the > > > > results! > > > > > Joel Birch.