In the following examples, it can be seen that we have used the values stored in JavaScript Variables are used inside the jQuery Selectors. Example 1: The concatenation technique can be applied in order to use the values stored in JavaScript variables.
Yes, it is possible to pass a variable into a jQuery attribute-contains selector. The [attribute*=value] selector is used to select each element with a specific attribute and a value containing a string.
In jQuery, the $ sign is just an alias to jQuery() , then an alias for a function. This page reports: Basic syntax is: $(selector).action() A dollar sign to define jQuery.
var name = this.name;
$("input[name=" + name + "]").hide();
OR you can do something like this.
var id = this.id;
$('#' + id).hide();
OR you can give some effect also.
$("#" + this.id).slideUp();
If you want to remove the entire element permanently form the page.
$("#" + this.id).remove();
You can also use it in this also.
$("#" + this.id).slideUp('slow', function (){
$("#" + this.id).remove();
});
$(`input[id="${this.name}"]`).hide();
As you're using an ID, this would perform better
$(`#${this.name}`).hide();
I highly recommend being more specific with your approach to hiding elements via button clicks. I would opt for using data-attributes instead. For example
<input id="bx" type="text">
<button type="button" data-target="#bx" data-method="hide">Hide some input</button>
Then, in your JavaScript
// using event delegation so no need to wrap it in .ready()
$(document).on('click', 'button[data-target]', function() {
var $this = $(this),
target = $($this.data('target')),
method = $this.data('method') || 'hide';
target[method]();
});
Now you can completely control which element you're targeting and what happens to it via the HTML. For example, you could use data-target=".some-class"
and data-method="fadeOut"
to fade-out a collection of elements.
$("input").click(function(){
var name = $(this).attr("name");
$('input[name="' + name + '"]').hide();
});
Also works with ID:
var id = $(this).attr("id");
$('input[id="' + id + '"]').hide();
when, (sometimes)
$('input#' + id).hide();
does not work, as it should.
You can even do both:
$('input[name="' + name + '"][id="' + id + '"]').hide();
var x = $(this).attr("name");
$("#" + x).hide();
$("#" + $(this).attr("name")).hide();
ES6 String Template
Here is a simple way if you don't need IE/EDGE support
$(`input[id=${x}]`).hide();
or
$(`input[id=${$(this).attr("name")}]`).hide();
This is a es6 feature called template string
(function($) {
$("input[type=button]").click(function() {
var x = $(this).attr("name");
$(`input[id=${x}]`).toggle(); //use hide instead of toggle
});
})(jQuery);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" id="bx" />
<input type="button" name="bx" value="1" />
<input type="text" id="by" />
<input type="button" name="by" value="2" />
String Concatenation
If you need IE/EDGE support use
$("#" + $(this).attr("name")).hide();
(function($) {
$("input[type=button]").click(function() {
$("#" + $(this).attr("name")).toggle(); //use hide instead of toggle
});
})(jQuery);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" id="bx" />
<input type="button" name="bx" value="1" />
<input type="text" id="by" />
<input type="button" name="by" value="2" />
Selector in DOM as data attribute
This is my preferred way as it makes you code really DRY
// HTML
<input type="text" id="bx" />
<input type="button" data-input-sel="#bx" value="1" class="js-hide-onclick"/>
//JS
$($(this).data("input-sel")).hide();
(function($) {
$(".js-hide-onclick").click(function() {
$($(this).data("input-sel")).toggle(); //use hide instead of toggle
});
})(jQuery);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" id="bx" />
<input type="button" data-input-sel="#bx" value="1" class="js-hide-onclick" />
<input type="text" id="by" />
<input type="button" data-input-sel="#by" value="2" class="js-hide-onclick" />
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