jQuery lets you a way to write down your own custom CSS methods. CSS Hooks directly into jQuery to override custom properties. I think you have written so many time in your website for different location. Isn’t it?
$(“div”).css(“margin”, “0px 1px 2px 3px”);
But using CSS Hooks, you can easily add the above code to jQuery.
Lets do one thing, split the user’s input into 4 values into array.
var directions = [“Top”, “Right”, “Bottom”, “Left”];
Now define our new “margin” hook with two methods, get and set:
$.cssHooks.margin = {
get: function(elem, value) {
var res = [];
$.each(directions, function(i, dir) {
res.push($.css(elem, "margin" + dir));
});
return res.join(" ");
},
set: function(elem, value) {
$.each(value.split(" "), function(i, val) {
elem.style["margin + directions[i]"] = val;
});
}
}; set method takes two arguments: the element to set the CSS properties on, and the value the user passed.
So in our case this will be a string of values, eg “0px 1px 2px 3px”. So we split the values at a space, and loop over them.
And get method will do the reverse i.e. getting each of the individual values and joining them into a string.
Here we use $.css which pulls out a CSS setting. So all this methods collects the four individual values and add them to an array, which I then join at the end to return a string.
Most marketing teams aren't failing because they lack data. They're failing because they can't act…
Email marketing continues to be one of the most effective ways for businesses to communicate,…
Xerox first introduced it around the mid-1970s. The need came up because the management activities…
Investing in the forex market may look to be a dangerous game. With some worthwhile…
The coronavirus outbreak has drastically changed the way we live our lives. Yes, that's absolutely…
Sales and marketing teams help attract, convert, and retain customers to ensure an organization’s long-term…