I have some html like this:
Volume =
JQUery has a .parents() method for moving up the DOM tree you can start there.
If you're interested in doing this a more semantic way I don't think using the REL attribute on a button is the best way to semantically define "this is the answer" in your code. I'd recommend something along these lines:
<p id="question1">
<label for="input1">Volume =</label>
<input type="text" name="userInput1" id="userInput1" />
<button type="button">Check answer</button>
<input type="hidden" id="answer1" name="answer1" value="3.93e-6" />
</p>
and
$("button").click(function () {
var correctAnswer = $(this).parent().siblings("input[type=hidden]").val();
var userAnswer = $(this).parent().siblings("input[type=text]").val();
validate(userAnswer, correctAnswer);
$("#messages").html(feedback);
});
Not quite sure how your validate and feedback are working, but you get the idea.
find() and closest() seems slightly slower than:
$(this).parent().attr("id");
http://jsfiddle.net/qVGwh/6/ Check this
$("#MadonwebTest").click(function () {
var id = $("#MadonwebTest").closest("div").attr("id");
alert(id);
});
To get the id of the parent div:
$(buttonSelector).parents('div:eq(0)').attr('id');
Also, you can refactor your code quite a bit:
$('button').click( function() {
var correct = Number($(this).attr('rel'));
validate(Number($(this).siblings('input').val()), correct);
$(this).parents('div:eq(0)').html(feedback);
});
Now there is no need for a button-class
explanation
eq(0), means that you will select one element from the jQuery object, in this case element 0, thus the first element. http://docs.jquery.com/Selectors/eq#index
$(selector).siblings(siblingsSelector) will select all siblings (elements with the same parent) that match the siblingsSelector http://docs.jquery.com/Traversing/siblings#expr
$(selector).parents(parentsSelector) will select all parents of the elements matched by selector that match the parent selector. http://docs.jquery.com/Traversing/parents#expr
Thus: $(selector).parents('div:eq(0)'); will match the first parent div of the elements matched by selector.
You should have a look at the jQuery docs, particularly selectors and traversing:
You could use event delegation on the parent div. Or use the closest method to find the parent of the button.
The easiest of the two is probably the closest.
var id = $("button").closest("div").prop("id");
1.
$(this).parent().attr("id");
2.
There must be a large number of ways! One could be to hide an element that contains the answer, e.g.
<div>
Volume = <input type="text" />
<button type="button">Check answer</button>
<span style="display: hidden">3.93e-6</span>
<div></div>
</div>
And then have similar jQuery code to the above to grab that:
$("button").click(function ()
{
var correct = Number($(this).parent().children("span").text());
validate ($(this).siblings("input").val(),correct);
$(this).siblings("div").html(feedback);
});
bear in mind that if you put the answer in client code then they can see it :) The best way to do this is to validate it server-side, but for an app with limited scope this may not be a problem.