I've previously used jquery's tabs extension to load page fragments via ajax, and to conceal or reveal hidden divs within a page. Both of these methods are well documented, and I've had no problems there.
Now, however, I want to do something different with tabs. When the user selects a tab, it should reload the page entirely - the reason for this is that the contents of each tabbed section are somewhat expensive to render, so I don't want to just send them all at once and use the normal method of toggling 'display:none' to reveal them.
My plan is to intercept the tabs' "select" event, and have that function reload the page with by manipulating document.location.
How, in the 'select' handler, can I get the newly selected tab index and the html LI object it corresponds to?
$('#edit_tabs').tabs( {
selected: 2, // which tab to start on when page loads
select: function(e, ui) {
var t = $(e.target);
// alert("data is " + t.data('load.tabs')); // undef
// alert("data is " + ui.data('load.tabs')); // undef
// This gives a numeric index...
alert( "selected is " + t.data('selected.tabs') )
// ... but it's the index of the PREVIOUSLY selected tab, not the
// one the user is now choosing.
return true;
// eventual goal is:
// ... document.location= extract-url-from(something); return false;
}
});
Is there an attribute of the event or ui object that I can read that will give the index, id, or object of the newly selected tab or the anchor tag within it?
Or is there a better way altogether to use tabs to reload the entire page?