Bradley Oesch
Bradley Oesch

Reputation: 763

What does the dollar sign mean inside an attribute selector in jQuery?

There is this jQuery which seems to look for all elements with id="scuba", but then it uses attr() to pull the id out? Could "scuba" be part of the id and attr pulls the entire id out? I've never seen the $ inside an attribute selector, just outside like the example below.

$('*[id$=scuba]').attr('id')

So my questions are:

  1. What does the $ or $= do in this example
  2. What does this code do?

Upvotes: 16

Views: 8691

Answers (2)

Boaz
Boaz

Reputation: 20220

The dollar sign

The first $ is a shorthand for the jQuery() function, the jQuery object constructor.

In other words, it's a variable called $ that's been assigned a function called jQuery, as can been seen in the unminified version of the jQuery source: window.jQuery = window.$ = jQuery;

The dollar-equals sign

The second $ is part of a jQuery selector called Attribute Ends With Selector . When used in an attribute selector, $= is a logical operator that literally means "true if the left-hand value ends with the right-hand value".

What this script actually does

Overall, this snippet first selects any element with an id attribute ending in scuba. It then retrieves the id value of the first element from the resulting jQuery object.

Upvotes: 25

Wim Ombelets
Wim Ombelets

Reputation: 5265

This code selects all DOM elements that have id attributes that end in scuba and returns their id values.

I'm pretty sure it's a better idea to include quotes around scuba, though.

Upvotes: 2

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