I appreciate the warm welcome = )
> That code won't work at all.
> I would suggest reading the doc page on .each():
Definitely on my to-do list...
> If you just want the loop index, it's passed to the .each() callback as the
> first parameter:
>
> $('a').each( function( i ){
> // 'i' is the loop index
> $(this).click(function(){
> // You can use 'i' directly in this code
> });
> });
Thanks for the info here, I'll definitely play around with it and see
what I can do.
> But is the loop index that useful here? I'm trying to picture what you might
> do with it. There may be a better way to do this - if you could say more
> about your application, someone may have a suggestion.
To give you a brief rundown. Imagine having a generic function with a
nested switch statment.
function myFunction(param)
{
switch(param)
{
case 1: // some code
break;
case 2: // some code
break;
case 3: // some code
break;
}
}
Now, imagine you have the following html items
<div id="myLinks">
<a href="#">link 1</a>
<a href="#">link 2</a>
<a href="#">link 3</a>
</div>
Basically, I want to do is have jQuery make each link call myFunction
when clicked and pass its index so the the correct switch statement is
fired...
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