Reputation: 28391
Using jQuery, how do you bind a click event to a table cell (below, class="expand"
) that will change the image src
(which is in the clicked cell - original will be plus.gif, alternating with minus.gif) and hide/show
the row immediately below it based on whether that row has a class of hide
. (show it if it has a class of "hide" and hide if it does not have a class of "hide"). I am flexible with changing ids and classes in the markup.
Thanks
Table rows
<tr>
<td class="expand"><img src="plus.gif"/></td>
<td>Data1</td><td>Data2</td><td>Data3</td>
</tr>
<tr class="show hide">
<td> </td>
<td>Data4</td><td>Data5</td><td>Data6</td>
</tr>
Upvotes: 15
Views: 54501
Reputation: 5402
I had to solve this problem recently, but mine involved some nested tables, so I needed a more specific, safer version of javascript. My situation was a little different because I had contents of a td and wanted to toggle the next TR, but the concept remains the same.
$(document).ready(function() {
$('.expandButton').click(function() {
$(this).closest('tr').next('tr.expandable').fadeToggle();
});
});
Closest grabs the nearest TR, in this case the first parent. You could add a CSS class on there if you want to get extremely specific. Then I specify to grab the next TR with a class of expandable, the target for this button. Then I just fadeToggle()
it to toggle whether it is displayed or not. Specifying the selectors really helps narrow down what it will handle.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1927
Nobody has any love for the ternary operator? :) I understand readability considerations, but for some reason it clicks for me to write it as:
$(document).ready( function () {
$(".expand").click(function() {
$("img",this).attr("src",
$("img",this)
.attr("src")=="minus.gif" ? "plus.gif" : "minus.gif"
);
$(this).parent().next().toggle();
});
});
...and has the benefit of no extraneous classes.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 4702
This is how the images are set up in the html
<tr>
<td colspan="2" align="center"
<input type="image" src="save.gif" id="saveButton" name="saveButton"
style="visibility: collapse; display: none"
onclick="ToggleFunction(false)"/>
<input type="image" src="saveDisabled.jpg" id="saveButtonDisabled"
name="saveButton" style="visibility: collapse; display: inline"
onclick="ToggleFunction(true)"/>
</td>
</tr>
Change the onClick
event to your own function that's in JS to toggle between them.
In the
ToggleFunction(seeSaveButton){
if(seeSaveButton){
$("#saveButton").attr("disabled", true)
.attr("style", "visibility: collapse; display: none;");
$("#saveButtonDisabled").attr("disabled", true)
.attr("style", "display: inline;");
}
else {
$("#saveButton").attr("disabled", false)
.attr("style", "display: inline;");
$("#saveButtonDisabled")
.attr("disabled", true)
.attr("style", "visibility: collapse; display: none;");
}
}
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 1365
You don't need the show and hide tags:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.expand').click(function() {
if( $(this).hasClass('hidden') )
$('img', this).attr("src", "plus.jpg");
else
$('img', this).attr("src", "minus.jpg");
$(this).toggleClass('hidden');
$(this).parent().next().toggle();
});
});
edit: Okay, I added the code for changing the image. That's just one way to do it. I added a class to the expand attribute as a tag when the row that follows is hidden and removed it when the row was shown.
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 620
Try this...
//this will bind the click event
//put this in a $(document).ready or something
$(".expand").click(expand_ClickEvent);
//this is your event handler
function expand_ClickEvent(){
//get the TR that you want to show/hide
var TR = $('.expand').parent().next();
//check its class
if (TR.hasClass('hide')){
TR.removeClass('hide'); //remove the hide class
TR.addClass('show'); //change it to the show class
TR.show(); //show the TR (you can use any jquery animation)
//change the image URL
//select the expand class and the img in it, then change its src attribute
$('.expand img').attr('src', 'minus.gif');
} else {
TR.removeClass('show'); //remove the show class
TR.addClass('hide'); //change it to the hide class
TR.hide(); //hide the TR (you can use any jquery animation)
//change the image URL
//select the expand class and the img in it, then change its src attribute
$('.expand img').attr('src', 'plus.gif');
}
}
Hope this helps.
Upvotes: 1