views:

285

answers:

2

I have a menu like this:

    <ul id="menu" class="undecorated"> 
        <li id="menuHome"><a href="/">Home</a> </li> 
        <li id="menuAbout"><a href="/Usergroup/About">About</a> </li> 
        <li id="menuArchives"><a href="/Usergroup/Archives">Archives</a> </li> 
        <li id="menuLinks"><a href="/Usergroup/Links">Links</a> </li> 
    </ul>

Is there a simple way that I can use jquery to re-order elements? I'm imagining something like this:

$('#menuAbout').moveDown().moveDown()

But any other way of achieving this is appreciated.

+3  A: 

No native prototypal methods, but you can make one easily:

$.fn.moveDown = function() {
    return this.each(function() {
        var next = $(this).next();
        if ( next.length ) {
            $(next).after(this);
        } else {
          $(this).parent().append( this );
        }
    })
}

$('#menuAbout').moveDown().moveDown()

This uses jQuery.prototype.after

meder
You can implement a moveUp by copying the function and replacing 'after' with 'before' and 'append(this)' with 'prepend(this)'.
meder
+2  A: 

It's actually not that hard. JQuery almost gets you there by itself with the "insertBefore" and "insertAfter" methods.

function moveUp($item) {
    $before = $item.prev();
    $item.insertBefore($before);
}

function moveDown($item) {
    $after = $item.next();
    $item.insertAfter($after);
}

You could use these like moveDown($('#menuAbout')); and the menuAbout item would move down.

If you wanted to extend jQuery to include these methods, you would write it like this:

$.fn.moveUp = function() {
    before = $(this).prev();
    $(this).insertBefore(before);
}

$.fn.moveDown = function() {
    after = $(this).next();
    $(this).insertAfter(after);
}

and now you can call the functions like $("#menuAbout").moveDown();

villecoder
Why do you use $variable for each variable, rather than just variable? Not that it’s invalid syntax — it’s just superfluous.
Jeremy Visser
True. But it also reminds me that I'm dealing with a jQuery object versus a regular variable/DOM object.
villecoder