$('h3').hide();
$('.calendarEvent').prev('h3').show();
2008/5/30 hubbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Sorry for not being clear.
>
> I would like to hide H3 when next element does not have class
> 'calendarEvent' (Meaning, there would be another H3, if there was not
> a div with class 'calendarEvent'
Sorry for not being clear.
I would like to hide H3 when next element does not have class
'calendarEvent' (Meaning, there would be another H3, if there was not
a div with class 'calendarEvent'
E.g.:
Text
Text
Text
Text
Text
text
Text
text
So, the first four H3 elements need to be hidden, as the
Can you be a bit more explicit about what it is that you want to do?
eg.
hide H1 where next element does not have class 'fred'
or
hide DIV, H1 and H6 where first child is not (DIV.dynamo)
or
hide P, H1 thru H6 where next element is not (P.kiev) or is (P.kiev
having a child of A.hideme)
Then
Thank you. So, if I wanted to check to see if there even were any p
tags after an h1 tag, and I wanted to hide the h1 tag, I would do the
following?
$('h1 + p:not(:has(*))').hide();
On May 28, 7:22 pm, Hamish Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Don't forget to check the jQuery documentation:h
Don't forget to check the jQuery documentation: http://docs.jquery.com/
The selector you want is 'prev + next':
http://docs.jquery.com/Selectors/next#prevnext
Eg, if I wanted to highlight in blue every paragraph object that comes
after a h1 heading:
$('h1 + p').css('color', 'blue');
On May 29
Hey guys,
I realized that I misstated my problem. I realized that the item I
want to check for is NOT a child, but the element that comes AFTER a
specific element. So, I have a list of specific elements, and if an
element with a specific class does not come after the first element,
hide the fir
Thanks Mike,
Could you explain your if statement for me, what does the && do? I am
still learning js and jQuery. :)
On May 28, 5:10 pm, "Michael Geary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would do it by checking the DOM directly, just because it's reasonably
> straightforward and very efficient:
>
>
You can do it with selectors:
$('#main:not(:has(*))').hide();
Ie - 'select the element with the id "main" that does _not_ contain
any other element'.
Note that this is different from $('#main:empty') which includes text
nodes.
On May 29, 12:10 pm, "Michael Geary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I
I would do it by checking the DOM directly, just because it's reasonably
straightforward and very efficient:
var $main = $('#main');
if( $main[0] && $main[0].firstChild ) $main.hide();
-Mike
> I am wondering how I could check if a parent element has
> children, and it it does not, I wo
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