I have a HTML markup like this:
<p>
<label>Arrive</label>
<input id="from-date1" class="from-date calender" type="text" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Depart</label>
<input id="to-date1" class="to-date calender" type="text" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Arrive</label>
<input id="from-date2" class="from-date calender" type="text" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Depart</label>
<input id="to-date2" class="to-date calender" type="text" />
</p>
I want to get the next element after from dates to get the corresponding to date. (Layout is a little more complex but from date has from-date class and to date has to-date class).
This is I am trying to do, I want to take a from date element and find the next element in the dom with to-date class. I tried this:
$('#from-date1').next('.to-date')
but it is giving me empty jQuery element. I think this is because next
gives the next sibling matching the selector. How can I get the corresponding to-date
?
Couldn't find a direct way of doing this, so wrote a little recursive algorithm for this.
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/sHGDP/
nextInDOM()
function takes 2 arguments namely the element to start looking from and the selector to match.
instead of
$('#from-date1').next('.to-date')
you can use:
nextInDOM('.to-date', $('#from-date1'))
Code
function nextInDOM(_selector, _subject) {
var next = getNext(_subject);
while(next.length != 0) {
var found = searchFor(_selector, next);
if(found != null) return found;
next = getNext(next);
}
return null;
}
function getNext(_subject) {
if(_subject.next().length > 0) return _subject.next();
return getNext(_subject.parent());
}
function searchFor(_selector, _subject) {
if(_subject.is(_selector)) return _subject;
else {
var found = null;
_subject.children().each(function() {
found = searchFor(_selector, $(this));
if(found != null) return false;
});
return found;
}
return null; // will/should never get here
}
.next('.to-date')
does not return anything, because you have an additional p
in between
You need .parent().next().find('.to-date')
.
You might have to adjust this if your dom is more complicated than your example. But essentially it boils down to something like this:
$(".from-date").each(function(){
// for each "from-date" input
console.log($(this));
// find the according "to-date" input
console.log($(this).parent().next().find(".to-date"));
});
edit: It's much better and faster to just look for the ID. The following code searches all from-dates and gets the according to-dates:
function getDeparture(el){
var toId = "#to-date"+el.attr("id").replace("from-date","");
//do something with the value here
console.log($(toId).val());
}
var id = "#from-date",
i = 0;
while($(id+(++i)).length){
getDeparture($(id+i));
}
Take a look at the example.
try
var flag = false;
var requiredElement = null;
$.each($("*"),function(i,obj){
if(!flag){
if($(obj).attr("id")=="from-date1"){
flag = true;
}
}
else{
if($(obj).hasClass("to-date")){
requiredElement = obj;
return false;
}
}
});
var item_html = document.getElementById('from-date1');
var str_number = item_html.attributes.getNamedItem("id").value;
// Get id's value.
var data_number = showIntFromString(str_number);
// Get to-date this class
// Select by JQ. $('.to-date'+data_number)
console.log('to-date'+data_number);
function showIntFromString(text){
var num_g = text.match(/\d+/);
if(num_g != null){
console.log("Your number:"+num_g[0]);
var num = num_g[0];
return num;
}else{
return;
}
}
Use JS. to get the key number from your id. Analysis it than output the number. Use JQ. selecter combine string with you want than + this number. Hope this can help you too.
I know this is an old question, but I figured I'd add a jQuery free alternate solution :)
I tried to keep the code simple by avoiding traversing the DOM.
let inputArray = document.querySelectorAll(".calender");
function nextInput(currentInput, inputClass) {
for (i = 0; i < inputArray.length - 1; i++) {
if(currentInput == inputArray[i]) {
for (j = 1; j < inputArray.length - i; j++) {
//Check if the next element exists and if it has the desired class
if(inputArray[i + j] && (inputArray[i + j].className == inputClass)) {
return inputArray[i + j];
break;
}
}
}
}
}
let currentInput = document.getElementById('from-date1');
console.log(nextInput(currentInput, 'to-date calender'));
If you know that the to date will always be the next input element with a class of "calender", then you don't need the second loop.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11560028/get-the-next-element-with-a-specific-class-after-a-specific-element