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Learning  jQuery : Better Interaction Design and Web Development with Simple JavaScript Techniques

You're reading from   Learning jQuery : Better Interaction Design and Web Development with Simple JavaScript Techniques Better Interaction Design and Web Development with Simple JavaScript Techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2007
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781847192509
Length 380 pages
Edition Edition
Languages
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Learning jQuery
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
1. Getting Started FREE CHAPTER 2. Selectors—How to Get Anything You Want 3. Events—How to Pull the Trigger 4. Effects—How to Add Flair to Your Actions 5. DOM Manipulation—How to Change Your Page on Command 6. AJAX—How to Make Your Site Buzzword-Compliant 7. Table Manipulation 8. Forms with Function 9. Shufflers and Rotators 10. Plug-ins 1. Online Resources 2. Development Tools 3. JavaScript Closures

XPath Selectors


XML Path Language (XPath) is a type of language for identifying different elements or their values within XML documents, similar to the way CSS identifies elements in HTML documents. The jQuery library supports a basic set of XPath selectors that we can use alongside CSS selectors, if we so desire. And with jQuery, both XPath and CSS selectors can be used regardless of the document type.

When it comes to attribute selectors, jQuery uses the XPath convention of identifying attributes by prefixing them with the @ symbol inside square brackets, rather than the less-flexible CSS equivalent. For example, to select all links that have a title attribute, we would write the following:

$('a[@title]')

This XPath syntax allows for another use of square brackets, without the @, to designate an element that is contained within another element. We can, for example, get all div elements that contain an ol element with the following selector expression:

$('div[ol]')

Styling Links

Attribute selectors...

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