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June 10, 2014 03:39
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Some jQuery methods written in plain JavaScript.
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// -----------------------------Listening for Document Ready----------------------------- | |
// Add an event listener of DOMContentLoaded to the whole document and call an anonymous function. | |
// You can then wrap your code in that function's brackets | |
// and it will execute once loading is complete. | |
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () { | |
// Our hawaiian greeting is displayed as soon as the page loads, | |
console.log('Aloha'); | |
}); | |
// -----------------------------Selecting elements----------------------------- | |
// We can use document.querySelector to get the first element that matches a certain criteria. | |
// It's only argument is a string containing one or more CSS selectors. | |
var lochNess = document.querySelector(".monsters"); | |
console.log("It's from Scotland - " + lochNess.textContent); | |
// We can also get all elements of a certain type or class by using document.querySelectorAll. | |
// This returns a NodeList of all the elements that fit our criteria. | |
var scary = document.querySelectorAll(".monsters"); | |
console.log("Hide and seek champions: "); | |
for (var i = 0; i < scary.length; i++) { | |
console.log(scary[i].innerHTML); | |
} | |
// -----------------------------Attaching and removing event listeners----------------------------- | |
var btn = document.querySelectorAll("button"), | |
list = document.querySelector("ul"); | |
// We call the addEventListener method on our desired event target(in this case a button). | |
// This will start a listener that will wait until a click is generated on the element. | |
btn[0].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
// When this button is clicked we want to enable zooming of our list. | |
// To do this we add an event listener to our list itself, | |
// so when the cursor hovers it, the enlarge function gets called. | |
list.addEventListener("mouseover", enlarge); | |
}); | |
// To disable the zooming we can simply use removeEventListener. | |
btn[1].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
// Removing event listeners doesn't work on anonymous functions, so always use a named one. | |
list.removeEventListener("mouseover", enlarge); | |
}); | |
// Let's create our enlarge function. | |
var enlarge = function () { | |
// Add class zoomed to the unordered list. | |
list.classList.add("zoomed"); | |
// When the cursor leaves the list return to normal size by removing the class. | |
list.addEventListener("mouseout", function () { | |
list.classList.remove("zoomed") | |
}); | |
}; | |
// Now we want to be able to color the names by clicking them. | |
// When a 'click' is registered on one of the list entries it should change its color to green. | |
// Thanks to event delegation we can actually add an event listener to the whole parent object. | |
// This way we don't have to add separate event listeners to each <li>. | |
list.addEventListener("click", function (e) { | |
// Make the coloring happen only to the clicked element by taking the target of the event. | |
e.target.classList.add('green'); | |
}); | |
// -----------------------------Manipulating classes and attributes----------------------------- | |
var btn = document.querySelectorAll("button"), | |
div = document.querySelector("#myDiv"); | |
btn[0].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
// Get any attribute easily. | |
console.log(div.id); | |
}); | |
// Element.classList stores all classes of the element in the form of a DOMTokenList. | |
var classes = div.classList; | |
btn[1].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
console.log(classes); | |
}); | |
btn[2].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
// It supports adding and removing classes. | |
classes.add("red"); | |
}); | |
btn[3].addEventListener("click", function () { | |
// You can also toggle a class on and off | |
classes.toggle("hidden"); | |
}); | |
// -----------------------------Getting and setting element content----------------------------- | |
var myText = document.querySelector("#myParagraph"), | |
btn = document.querySelectorAll("button"); | |
// We can easily get the text content of a node and all its descendants. | |
var myContent = myText.textContent; | |
console.log("textContent: " + myContent); | |
// When using textContent to alter the text of an element | |
// it deletes the old content and replaces it with new. | |
btn[0].addEventListener('click', function () { | |
myText.textContent = " Koalas are the best animals "; | |
}); | |
// If we want to grab all the HTML in a node (including the tags) we can use innerHTML. | |
var myHtml = myText.innerHTML; | |
console.log("innerHTML: " + myHtml); | |
// To change the html simply supply new content. | |
// Of course we aren't limited to text only this time. | |
btn[1].addEventListener('click', function () { | |
myText.innerHTML = "<button> Penguins are the best animals </button>"; | |
}); | |
// -----------------------------Inserting and removing elements----------------------------- | |
var lunch = document.querySelector("#lunch"); | |
// In the HTML tab we have our lunch for today. | |
// Let's say we want to add fries to it. | |
var addFries = function () { | |
// First we have to create our new element and set its content | |
var fries = document.createElement("div"); | |
fries.innerHTML = '<li><h4> Fries </h4></li>'; | |
// After that's done, we can use appendChild to insert it. | |
// This will make our fries appear at the end of the lunch list. | |
lunch.appendChild(fries); | |
}; | |
// Now we want to add cheese both before and after the beef in our burger. | |
var addCheese = function () { | |
var beef = document.querySelector("#Beef"), | |
topSlice = document.createElement("li"), | |
bottomSlice = document.createElement("li"); | |
bottomSlice.innerHTML = topSlice.innerHTML = 'Cheese'; | |
// Inserting the top slice: | |
// Take the parent of the beef (that's the sandwich) and use insertBefore on it. | |
// The first argument to insertBefore is the new element we're gonna add. | |
// The second argument is the node before which the new element is inserted. | |
beef.parentNode.insertBefore(topSlice, beef); | |
// The bottom slice: | |
// We have to use a little trick here! | |
// Supply the next nearest element as the second argument to insertBefore, | |
// that way we can actually insert after the element we want. | |
beef.parentNode.insertBefore(bottomSlice, beef.nextSibling); | |
}; | |
var removePickles = function () { | |
// Finally, we want to get rid of those pickles. Again javascript got us covered! | |
var pickles = document.querySelector("#pickles"); | |
if (pickles) { | |
pickles.parentNode.removeChild(pickles); | |
} | |
}; | |
// Delicious! | |
var btn = document.querySelectorAll("button"); | |
btn[0].addEventListener('click', addFries); | |
btn[1].addEventListener('click', addCheese); | |
btn[2].addEventListener('click', removePickles); | |
// -----------------------------Walking the DOM tree----------------------------- | |
var snakes = document.querySelector('#snakes'), | |
birds = document.querySelector('#birds'); | |
snakes.addEventListener('click', function (e) { | |
// To access the parent of a certain element in the DOM tree, we use the parentNode method. | |
var parent = e.target.parentNode; | |
console.log("Parent: " + parent.id); | |
// For the opposite, calling the .children method gets all child elements of the selected object. | |
console.log("Children: "); | |
var children = e.target.children; | |
// This returns a HTMLCollection (a type of array), so we have to iterate to access every child's content. | |
for (var i = 0; i < children.length; i++) { | |
console.log(children[i].textContent); | |
} | |
}); | |
birds.addEventListener('click', function (e) { | |
// Getting the nearest sibling to our element is self-explanatory. | |
var previous = e.target.previousElementSibling; | |
if (previous) { | |
console.log("Previous sibling: " + previous.textContent); | |
} | |
var next = e.target.nextElementSibling; | |
if (next) { | |
console.log("Next sibling: " + next.textContent); | |
} | |
// However, to acquire all the siblings of a node is a bit more complex. | |
// We have to take all of its parent's children and then exclude the original element. | |
// This is done by using filter and calling a function that checks every child one by one. | |
console.log("All siblings: "); | |
Array.prototype.filter.call(e.target.parentNode.children, function (child) { | |
if (child !== e.target) { | |
console.log(child.textContent); | |
} | |
}); | |
}); | |
// -----------------------------Looping over arrays----------------------------- | |
var ninjaTurtles = ["Donatello", "Leonardo", "Michelangelo", "Raphael"]; | |
// ForEach automatically iterates through an array. | |
ninjaTurtles.forEach(function (entry) { | |
console.log(entry); | |
}); | |
// The map method calls a function on every element of an array and creates a new array with the results. | |
var lovesPizza = ninjaTurtles.map(function (entry) { | |
return entry.concat(" loves pizza!"); | |
}); | |
console.log(lovesPizza); | |
// -----------------------------Animations----------------------------- | |
var btn = document.querySelectorAll("button"), | |
circle = document.querySelector("#circle"); | |
// First, we have to add a class of animated to our object, so the library can recognize it. | |
circle.classList.add('animated'); | |
// We iterate over all of our buttons and add event listeners to each one. | |
for (var i = 0; i < btn.length; i++) { | |
// Define an anonymous function here, to make it possible to use the i variable. | |
(function (i) { | |
btn[i].addEventListener('click', function () { | |
// To start an animation you just have to add a specific class to the object. | |
// In our case we stored the classes' names in the data-animation attribute of each button. | |
var animation = btn[i].getAttribute('data-animation'); | |
circle.classList.add(animation); | |
// To make it work more then once we have to remove the class after the animation is complete. | |
window.setTimeout(function () { | |
circle.classList.remove(animation); | |
}, 1000); | |
}); | |
}(i)); | |
} | |
// -----------------------------Ajax----------------------------- | |
// This simple example logs the body of our url (a html file) in the console. | |
// It's possible to do a manual GET request but it is somewhat a tedious task. | |
var request = new XMLHttpRequest(); | |
request.open('GET', 'http://tutorialzine.com/misc/files/my_url.html', true); | |
request.onload = function (e) { | |
if (request.readyState === 4) { | |
// Check if the get was successful. | |
if (request.status === 200) { | |
console.log(request.responseText); | |
} else { | |
console.error(request.statusText); | |
} | |
} | |
}; | |
// Catch errors: | |
request.onerror = function (e) { | |
console.error(request.statusText); | |
}; | |
request.send(null); | |
// Using a small library, such as Reqwest, can make your job much easier. | |
reqwest({ | |
url: 'http://tutorialzine.com/misc/files/my_url.html', | |
method: 'get', | |
error: function (err) { | |
}, | |
success: function (resp) { | |
console.log(resp); | |
} | |
}); |
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