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Learning jQuery - Fourth Edition

You're reading from   Learning jQuery - Fourth Edition Add to your current website development skills with this brilliant guide to JQuery. This step by step course needs little prior JavaScript knowledge so is suitable for beginners and more seasoned developers alike.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782163145
Length 444 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Learning jQuery Fourth Edition
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started FREE CHAPTER 2. Selecting Elements 3. Handling Events 4. Styling and Animating 5. Manipulating the DOM 6. Sending Data with Ajax 7. Using Plugins 8. Developing Plugins 9. Advanced Selectors and Traversing 10. Advanced Events 11. Advanced Effects 12. Advanced DOM Manipulation 13. Advanced Ajax JavaScript Closures Testing JavaScript with QUnit Quick Reference Index

Revisiting attribute manipulation


By now, we are very used to getting and setting values that are associated with DOM elements. We have done this with simple methods like .attr(), .prop(), and .css(), convenient shorthands such as .addClass(), .css(), and .val(), and complex bundles of behavior such as .animate(). Even the simple methods, though, do quite a bit of work for us behind the scenes. We can get yet more utility out of them if we better understand what they do.

Using shorthand element-creation syntax

We often create new elements in our jQuery code by providing an HTML string to the $() function or to DOM insertion functions. For example, we create a quite large HTML fragment in Listing 12.9 in order to produce many DOM elements. This technique is fast and concise. There are circumstances when it is not ideal, however; we might, for instance, want to escape special characters from text before it is used, or apply style rules that are browser-dependent. In these cases, we can create...

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