Why doesn't it fire the alert?
var $anchor = $(this);
$('.hide').val($(this).attr('href'));
$('html, body').animate({
scrollLeft: $($anchor.attr('href')).offset().left
}, {
queue: false,
duration: 1000,
easing: 'easeInOutCirc'
}, function () {
alert('test');
});
There are multiple different syntax options you can use with .animate()
. When you pass a properties object and an options object (like you are doing), the completion function goes in the options object not as the third parameter like this:
var $anchor = $(this);
$('.hide').val($(this).attr('href'));
$('html, body').animate({
scrollLeft: $($anchor.attr('href')).offset().left
}, {
queue: false,
duration: 1000,
easing: 'easeInOutCirc',
complete: function () {
alert('test');
}
}
);
This is described in full in the jQuery .animate() doc.
.animate( properties, options )
properties - A map of CSS properties that the animation will move toward.
options - A map of additional options to pass to the method. Supported keys:
duration: A string or number determining how long the animation will run.
easing: A string indicating which easing function to use for the transition.
complete: A function to call once the animation is complete.
step: A function to be called after each step of the animation.
queue: A Boolean indicating whether to place the animation in the effects queue. If false, the animation will begin immediately. As of jQuery 1.7, the queue option can also accept a string, in which case the animation is added to the queue represented by that string.
specialEasing: A map of one or more of the CSS properties defined by the properties argument and their corresponding easing functions (added 1.4).
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