jQuery – Descendant selector example
Published: May 10, 2010 , Updated: May 4, 2010 , Author: mkyong
jQuery descender selector (X Y) is used to select all elements matched by “Y” that are child, grandchild, great-grandchild, great-great-grandchild..(any levels deep) of a “X” element.
For example,
- $(‘#container div’) – selects all elements matched by <div> that are descendants of an element that has an id of container.
- $(‘form input’) – selects all elements matched by <input> that are descendants of an element matched by <form>.
jQuery Example
In this example, it used the jQuery descendant selector to add a “red border” to all the <input> fields that are descendant of a <form> element.
<html> <head> <title>jQuery descendant selector example</title> <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.3.2.min.js"></script> <style type="text/css"> div { padding:8px 0px 8px 8px; } </style> </head> <script type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function(){ $("form input").css("border", "2px solid red"); }); </script> <body> <h1>jQuery child selector example</h1> <form> <label>TextBox 1 (Child) : </label><input name="textbox1"> <div class="level1"> <label>TextBox 2 (GrandChild) : </label><input name="textbox2"> </div> <div class="level1"> <div class="level2"> <label>TextBox 3 (Great GrandChild) : </label><input name="textbox3"> </div> </div> <label>TextBox 4 (Child) : </label><input name="textbox4"> </form> <div> I'm form siblings #1 - DIV</div> <p> I'm form siblings #2 - P </p> <div> I'm form siblings #3 - DIV </div> <p> I'm form siblings #4 - P </p> </body> </html>
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Actually, if my understanding is correct, the faster way to make such selections (since jquery 1.3 anyway and the Sizzle selector engine) is $(‘#container’).find(‘div’)
hi yaron, thanks for sharing your thoughts here, but may i know what causing the latter is faster?
There is a claim that Sizzler makes selections from RIGHT to left, so that $(“#somediv .someclass”) means “look in entire DOM for items with class .someclass, then for each check to see if one of it’s parents has an ID of #somediv. HOWEVER, that may be only true for anything but the id (#) selector – couldn’t find a definite answer anywhere… Should really post on it on jQuery’s own forums…