views:

529

answers:

3

Hi,

To give a simplified example, I've got the following block repeated on the page lots of times (it's dynamically generated):

<div class="box">
   <div class="something1"></div>
   <div class="something2">
      <a class="mylink">My link</a>
   </div>
</div>

When clicked, I can get to the parent of the link with:

$(".mylink").click(function() {
   $(this).parents(".box").fadeOut("fast");
});

However... I need to get to the <div class="something1"> of that particular parent.

Basically, can someone tell me how to refer to a higher-level sibling without being able to refer to it directly? Let's call it big brother. A direct reference to the big brother's class name would cause every instance of that element on the page to fade out - which is not the desired effect.

I've tried:

parents(".box .something1") ... no luck.
parents(".box > .something1") ... no luck.
siblings() ... no luck.

Anyone? Thanks.

+1  A: 
$(this).parent()

Tree traversal is fun

$(this).parent().siblings(".something1");

$(this).parent().prev(); // if you always want the parent's previous sibling

$(this).parents(".box").children(".something1");

And much more ways, you might find these docs helpful.

Anurag
Thanks but wasn't looking for the parent, but rather another child of parent (or grandparent actually).
Tom
@Anurag: He's looking for an uncle, not the parent.
SLaks
lol, big brother, uncle.. looks like the full family is here :)
Anurag
Hehe... its a family affair indeed.
Tom
+4  A: 

Calling .parents(".box .something1") will return all parent elements that match the selector .box .something. In other words, it will return parent elements that are .something1 and are inside of .box.

You need to get the children of the closest parent, like this:

$(this).closest('.box').children('.something1')

This code calls .closest to get the innermost parent matching a selector, then calls .children on that parent element to find the uncle you're looking for.

SLaks
Excellent thanks, works exactly as wanted.
Tom
+1  A: 

If I understood your problem correctly, $(this).parents('.box').children('.something1') Is this what you are looking for?

Teja Kantamneni
This also works.
Tom