I haven\'t seen any docs saying jQuery can change any CSS definition such as changing
td { padding: 0.2em 1.2em }
to
td {
There is DOM access to stylesheets, but it's one of those things we tend to avoid because IE needs a load of compatibility cruft.
A better way would be typically be to trigger the change indirectly, using a simple class change on an ancestor:
td { padding: 0.2em 1.2em }
body.changed td { padding: 0.32em 2em }
Now just $('body').addClass('changed')
and all the td
s update.
If you really must frob the stylesheets:
var sheet= document.styleSheets[0];
var rules= 'cssRules' in sheet? sheet.cssRules : sheet.rules; // IE compatibility
rules[0].style.padding= '0.32em 2em';
This assumes that the td
rule in question is the first rule in the first stylesheet. If not, you might have to go searching for it by iterating the rules looking for the right selectorText. Or just add a new rule to the end, overriding the old one:
if ('insertRule' in sheet)
sheet.insertRule('td { padding: 0.32em 2em }', rules.length);
else // IE compatibility
sheet.addRule('td', 'padding: 0.32em 2em', rules.length);
jQuery itself doesn't give you any special tools to access stylesheets, but it's possible there are plugins that might.
$('head').append('<style id="customCSS">td { padding: 0.32em 2em }</style>');
I added an id attribute so you can target and remove it when you no longer want that change to apply.
$('#customCSS').remove();
I ran into a problem where I didn't know the width I wanted a class until it was loaded and did this.
<script>
$(function() {
calcWidth = CalculateWidth();
$('body').prepend('<style> .dynamicWidth { width: ' + calcWidth + 'px } </style>');
}
</script>
Note: it may matter where you put the script (prepend, append) depending on how you want the rules to 'cascade'.
Nope, it just doesn't work this way...not sure any better way to explain it than that :)
jQuery was designed to work on elements...if you're doing this for testing, Firebug of the Chrome console are options though.
Something you could do, is have a server-side generated stylesheet, for example how ThemeRoller does it, and jQuery (or vanilla JS) dynamically adds that <link>
into your header, something like:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="myCSS.php?tdPad=.32|2" type="text/css" />
If it was the last link, it'd override the previously defined style...in fact this is exactly how ThemeRoller works.