CSS style is not applying to button in React component - javascript

I have my CSS stylesheet in my index.html file where my React app is loaded. In here I have the following CSS values :
#Webshop {
background-color: white;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
and
#Webshop, button {
position: relative
border: 6px solid #232323
z-index: 2
padding: 12px 22px
margin: 0 10px
box-sizing: border-box
font-size: 26px
font-weight: 600
text-transform: uppercase
text-decoration: none
color: #232323
}
Webshop is located in a different file that contains this Render method:
render() {
return (
<div className='Webshop' id='Webshop'>
<li>
<img src="./products.jpeg" width="350" height="350"></img>
<button onClick={this.handleClick} className="addit">Add to cart</button>
<select id="size" onChange={this.change} value={this.state.value}>
<option value="medium">Medium</option>
<option value="large">Large</option>
<option value="x-large">X-large</option>
</select>
<img src="./product.jpeg" width="350" height="350"></img>
</li>
</div>
);
}
For some reason the CSS applies to Webshop but not to the button. I have other Components in other files the work also. How can I get the CSS to apply to the button in the Render method?

The first two are critical, the last two are advices.
1. remove the comma like so:
#Webshop button {
...
}
2. CSS semicolons are a must, while in JavaScript you can omit them, which is being encouraged to do so in Standard.js rules.
3. The img tags should be self-closing like so: <img />. In fact any element without a text within them should follow as well.
4. Avoid using IDs in your CSS. Read more about CSS Specificity.

Try applying button style separately. Currently the second style applies to #webshop and button as you separated them with comma, which is strange, why would you apply same styling to a div element and a button element? Try doing #webshop button or #webshop > button instead and applying button styles separately.
Also you are missing semicolons at the end of each property in the second style bit which is probably an issue here.

Check https://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css_selectors.asp
Right now you are applying
#Webshop, button {
position: relative
border: 6px solid #232323
z-index: 2
padding: 12px 22px
margin: 0 10px
box-sizing: border-box
font-size: 26px
font-weight: 600
text-transform: uppercase
text-decoration: none
color: #232323
}
to all elements that either have Webshop id or are buttons,
it should look more like
#webshop button {
...
}

Related

radio button having multiple forms with style [duplicate]

Is it possible to apply a css(3) style to a label of a checked radio button?
I have the following markup:
<input type="radio" id="rad" name="radio"/>
<label for="rad">A Label</label>
What I was hoping is that
label:checked { font-weight: bold; }
would do something, but alas it does not (as I expected).
Is there a selector that can achieve this sort of functionality? You may surround with divs etc if that helps, but the best solution would be one that uses the label ''for'' attribute.
It should be noted that I am able to specify browsers for my application, so best of class css3 etc please.
try the + symbol:
It is Adjacent sibling combinator. It combines two sequences of simple selectors having the same parent and the second one must come IMMEDIATELY after the first.
As such:
input[type="radio"]:checked+label{ font-weight: bold; }
//a label that immediately follows an input of type radio that is checked
works very nicely for the following markup:
<input id="rad1" type="radio" name="rad"/><label for="rad1">Radio 1</label>
<input id="rad2" type="radio" name="rad"/><label for="rad2">Radio 2</label>
... and it will work for any structure, with or without divs etc as long as the label follows the radio input.
Example:
input[type="radio"]:checked+label { font-weight: bold; }
<input id="rad1" type="radio" name="rad"/><label for="rad1">Radio 1</label>
<input id="rad2" type="radio" name="rad"/><label for="rad2">Radio 2</label>
I know this is an old question, but if you would like to have the <input> be a child of <label> instead of having them separate, here is a pure CSS way that you could accomplish it:
:checked + span { font-weight: bold; }
Then just wrap the text with a <span>:
<label>
<input type="radio" name="test" />
<span>Radio number one</span>
</label>
See it on JSFiddle.
I forget where I first saw it mentioned but you can actually embed your labels in a container elsewhere as long as you have the for= attribute set. So, let's check out a sample on SO:
* {
padding: 0;
margin: 0;
background-color: #262626;
color: white;
}
.radio-button {
display: none;
}
#filter {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
.filter-label {
display: inline-block;
border: 4px solid green;
padding: 10px 20px;
font-size: 1.4em;
text-align: center;
cursor: pointer;
}
main {
clear: left;
}
.content {
padding: 3% 10%;
display: none;
}
h1 {
font-size: 2em;
}
.date {
padding: 5px 30px;
font-style: italic;
}
.filter-label:hover {
background-color: #505050;
}
#featured-radio:checked~#filter .featured,
#personal-radio:checked~#filter .personal,
#tech-radio:checked~#filter .tech {
background-color: green;
}
#featured-radio:checked~main .featured {
display: block;
}
#personal-radio:checked~main .personal {
display: block;
}
#tech-radio:checked~main .tech {
display: block;
}
<input type="radio" id="featured-radio" class="radio-button" name="content-filter" checked="checked">
<input type="radio" id="personal-radio" class="radio-button" name="content-filter" value="Personal">
<input type="radio" id="tech-radio" class="radio-button" name="content-filter" value="Tech">
<header id="filter">
<label for="featured-radio" class="filter-label featured" id="feature-label">Featured</label>
<label for="personal-radio" class="filter-label personal" id="personal-label">Personal</label>
<label for="tech-radio" class="filter-label tech" id="tech-label">Tech</label>
</header>
<main>
<article class="content featured tech">
<header>
<h1>Cool Stuff</h1>
<h3 class="date">Today</h3>
</header>
<p>
I'm showing cool stuff in this article!
</p>
</article>
<article class="content personal">
<header>
<h1>Not As Cool</h1>
<h3 class="date">Tuesday</h3>
</header>
<p>
This stuff isn't nearly as cool for some reason :(;
</p>
</article>
<article class="content tech">
<header>
<h1>Cool Tech Article</h1>
<h3 class="date">Last Monday</h3>
</header>
<p>
This article has awesome stuff all over it!
</p>
</article>
<article class="content featured personal">
<header>
<h1>Cool Personal Article</h1>
<h3 class="date">Two Fridays Ago</h3>
</header>
<p>
This article talks about how I got a job at a cool startup because I rock!
</p>
</article>
</main>
Whew. That was a lot for a "sample" but I feel it really drives home the effect and point: we can certainly select a label for a checked input control without it being a sibling. The secret lies in keeping the input tags a child to only what they need to be (in this case - only the body element).
Since the label element doesn't actually utilize the :checked pseudo selector, it doesn't matter that the labels are stored in the header. It does have the added benefit that since the header is a sibling element we can use the ~ generic sibling selector to move from the input[type=radio]:checked DOM element to the header container and then use descendant/child selectors to access the labels themselves, allowing the ability to style them when their respective radio boxes/checkboxes are selected.
Not only can we style the labels, but also style other content that may be descendants of a sibling container relative to all of the inputs. And now for the moment you've all been waiting for, the JSFIDDLE! Go there, play with it, make it work for you, find out why it works, break it, do what you do!
Hopefully that all makes sense and fully answers the question and possibly any follow ups that may crop up.
If your input is a child element of the label and you have more than one labels, you can combine #Mike's trick with Flexbox + order.
label.switchLabel {
display: flex;
justify-content: space-between;
width: 150px;
}
.switchLabel .left { order: 1; }
.switchLabel .switch { order: 2; }
.switchLabel .right { order: 3; }
/* sibling selector ~ */
.switchLabel .switch:not(:checked) ~ span.left { color: lightblue }
.switchLabel .switch:checked ~ span.right { color: lightblue }
/* style the switch */
:root {
--radio-size: 14px;
}
.switchLabel input.switch {
width: var(--radio-size);
height: var(--radio-size);
border-radius: 50%;
border: 1px solid #999999;
box-sizing: border-box;
outline: none;
-webkit-appearance: inherit;
-moz-appearance: inherit;
appearance: inherit;
box-shadow: calc(var(--radio-size) / 2) 0 0 0 gray, calc(var(--radio-size) / 4) 0 0 0 gray;
margin: 0 calc(5px + var(--radio-size) / 2) 0 5px;
}
.switchLabel input.switch:checked {
box-shadow: calc(-1 * var(--radio-size) / 2) 0 0 0 gray, calc(-1 * var(--radio-size) / 4) 0 0 0 gray;
margin: 0 5px 0 calc(5px + var(--radio-size) / 2);
}
<label class="switchLabel">
<input type="checkbox" class="switch" />
<span class="left">Left</span>
<span class="right">Right</span>
</label>
asd
html
<label class="switchLabel">
<input type="checkbox" class="switch"/>
<span class="left">Left</span>
<span class="right">Right</span>
</label>
css
label.switchLabel {
display: flex;
justify-content: space-between;
width: 150px;
}
.switchLabel .left { order: 1; }
.switchLabel .switch { order: 2; }
.switchLabel .right { order: 3; }
/* sibling selector ~ */
.switchLabel .switch:not(:checked) ~ span.left { color: lightblue }
.switchLabel .switch:checked ~ span.right { color: lightblue }
See it on JSFiddle.
note: Sibling selector only works within the same parent. To work around this, you can make the input hidden at top-level using #Nathan Blair hack.
UPDATE:
This only worked for me because our existing generated html was wacky, generating labels along with radios and giving them both checked attribute.
Never mind, and big ups for Brilliand for bringing it up!
If your label is a sibling of a checkbox (which is usually the case), you can use the ~ sibling selector, and a label[for=your_checkbox_id] to address it... or give the label an id if you have multiple labels (like in this example where I use labels for buttons)
Came here looking for the same - but ended up finding my answer in the docs.
a label element with checked attribute can be selected like so:
label[checked] {
...
}
I know it's an old question, but maybe it helps someone out there :)

Show div when post has class

Update
I'd modded the CSS given by David Thomas a bit. Its now a banner.
.div.popular::before {
/* setting the default styles for
the generated content: */
display: block;
width: 10em;
height: 2em;
line-height: 2em;
text-align: center;
background: #F60;
color: #fff;
font-size: 1.4rem;
position: absolute;
top: 30px;
right: 0px;
z-index: 1;
}
I would like to make a folded corner sort of like in this post: Folded banner using css
--- Original post ---
Let me first explain what I'm trying to do. I'm trying to give some post some extra attention by making a little circle with some call-to-action text in it.
But I only want this to trigger when a div has a specific class.
So if the div the class populair or sale I would like to have a little circle show up on that post. This script what I am using right now.
$(document).ready(function($){
if($("#front-page-items").hasClass('populair')){
$(".populair-div").show();
}
if($("#front-page-items").hasClass('sale')){
$(".sale-div").show();
}
});
And this HTML:
<div class="populair-div" style="display:none;">
<strong>Populair</strong>
</div>
<div class="sale-div" style="display:none;">
<strong>Sale</strong>
</div>
But this only show's the populair-div and not the other one. I'm guessing my script is wrong. Should I use else for all the other call-to-action classes?
$(document).ready(function($){
if($("#front-page-items").hasClass('populair')){
$(".populair-div").show();
}
else($("#front-page-items").hasClass('sale')){
$(".sale-div").show();
}
else($("#front-page-items").hasClass('Free')){
$(".free-div").show();
} // and so on
});
Is there someone that could help me out? Also is it possible to echo the div so I don't have to write a whole div for every call-to-action div?
For something like this, where the displayed text is explicitly linked to the class-name of the element it's easiest to use CSS and the generated content available, effectively hiding the elements you don't wish to show by default and then explicitly allowing elements you want to show, along with the generated content of those elements (using the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements:
div {
/* preventing <div> elements
from showing by default: */
display: none;
}
div.populair-div,
div.sale-div {
/* ensuring that elements matching
the selectors above (<div>
elements with either the 'sale-div'
or 'populair-div' class-names
are shown: */
display: block;
}
div.populair-div::before,
div.sale-div::before {
/* setting the default styles for
the generated content: */
display: block;
width: 4em;
height: 4em;
line-height: 4em;
text-align: center;
border: 3px solid transparent;
border-radius: 50%;
}
div.populair-div::before {
/* setting the text with the
"content" property: */
content: "Popular";
/* providing a specific colour
for the generated contents'
border: */
border-color: #0c0;
}
div.sale-div::before {
content: "Sale";
border-color: #f90;
}
/* entirely irrelevant, just so you can
see a (slightly prettified) difference
should you remove the default display
property for the <div> elements: */
code {
background-color: #ddd;
}
em {
font-style: italic;
}
<div class="neither-popular-nor-sale">
<p>
This element should not be shown, it has neither a class of <code>"populair-div"</code> <em>or</em> <code>"sale-div"</code>.
</p>
</div>
<div class="populair-div">
</div>
<div>Also not to be shown.</div>
<div class="sale-div">
</div>
You can use toggle function for this. It will be shorter and clearer.
Display or hide the matched elements.
Note: The buttons is for tests.
$(document).ready(function($){
init();
});
function init() {
$(".populair-div").toggle($("#front-page-items").hasClass('populair'));
$(".sale-div").toggle($("#front-page-items").hasClass('sale'));
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="front-page-items" class="populair sale"></div>
<div class="populair-div">populair-div</div>
<div class="sale-div">sale-div</div>
<hr />
<button onclick="document.getElementById('front-page-items').classList.toggle('populair');init()">toggle populair</button>
<button onclick="document.getElementById('front-page-items').classList.toggle('sale');init()">toggle sale</button>

align an object relatively to another object Angularjs

I developed, using ng-show and ng-hide, a box of description that pops up under a text after I click it.
But the problem is, the decription box is not shown exactly under the text, like here in the picture.
I want the description to be shown exactly under R2A.
This is my code:
HTML
<ion-content>
<div class="contenu">
<p>Salut</font><font size="4">, Welcome</font><font size="4">, Bienvenue chez </font>R2A<font size="4">...</font></p>
<div ><font class="boxed" ng-show="collapsed"size="4" >I am description</font></div>
<p> Nous sommes ton equipe de Welcomers, nous allons t'accompagner pour ta première journée.</p>
</div>
</ion-content>
CSS
.collapsed {
width: 300px;
padding: 25px;
border: 25px solid navy;
margin: 25px;
}
.contenu .boxed {
display: inline-block;
padding:20px;
border-radius: 10px;
box-shadow: 5px 5px 10px #000;
background-color: #FBC02D;
}
First, transform the a into a button and you can put your boxed element inside your link.
Now, you can position the boxed element relative to the button element which contains the R2A text.
The boxedelement should have the position: absolute;, so it positions relative to the first ancestor which does not have the position static. Next, the button, which by default has the position static, should have the position: relative;. This means that it positions relative to its default position. If we don't specify top, left etc. the position remains the same. More here.
So, the html :
...
<button class="important-link" ng-model="collapsed" ng-click="collapsed=!collapsed">
<span>R2A</span>
<div class="boxed" ng-show="collapsed">
I am Description
</div>
</button>
...
And the css:
important-link {
position: relative;
background: none;
border: none;
}
.important-link span {
font-size: 30px;
color: #B9121B;
}
.boxed {
min-width: 100px;
position: absolute;
width: auto;
top: 50px;
padding: 20px;
border-radius: 10px;
box-shadow: 5px 5px 10px #000;
background-color: #FBC02D;
}
And here is a fiddle with the whole example.
PS. It's recommended not to use inline CSS in your HTML like style="font-size:180%; ..
Edit
So, if you don't want some kind of 'tooltip' effect there are two solutions.
In the first one, you add a margin-top to the next div, so that the description box doesn't overlap the text below. You can add it with ng-class on ng-style so the margin applies only if the description box is shown.
Second solution, inside the button element, both the text (R2A) and the description should be block elements, so that they position one under the other (block vs inline elements).
And then you remove the position: absolute from the boxed element (and you can also remove the position : relative; from the parent).
Here is the updated fiddle.
There are still some limitations in both solutions, so the one you choose depends on the final result.
You can also use JS to manipulate and position the elements of the DOM.
Just put both of these elements in a separate div element and add a break in between <br>:
<div>R2A
<font size="4">...</font></p>
<br>
<div>
<font class="boxed" ng-show="collapsed"size="4" >I am description</font>
</div>
</div>
Or put them in the same span.
You may have to fiddle around with the margins as well.

Edit cursor not displayed on Chrome in contenteditable

When you open this page (see Live demo) with Chrome :
<span id="myspan" contenteditable=true></span>
CSS :
#myspan { border: 0; outline: 0;}
JS :
$(myspan).focus();
the contenteditable span has focus (you can start to write things and you will see that it already had focus), but we don't see the "I" edit cursor.
How to make that this cursor is displayed ? (Remark : outline:0 is needed, as well as the fact that the span is empty even with no white space).
Note : With Firefox, the cursor is displayed.
The problem is that spans are inline elements. Just add display:block; to your CSS and it will fix the problem.
$(myspan).focus();
#myspan {
border: 0;
outline: 0;
display: block;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<span id="myspan" contenteditable=true></span>
I added padding to the left and the cursor appears.
#myspan
{
border: 0;
outline: 0;
min-width: 100px;
height: 30px;
padding-left: 1px;
}
Demo in jsFiddle
.cont_edit {
outline: 1px solid transparent;
}
This just has to do with the way an empty ContentEditable area is rendered. To prove it's not about the focus, add some text to your editable div, and then delete it. When the last character is gone, the cursor will disappear
From the question Setting the caret position to an empty node inside a contentEditable element
The selection/range model is based around indexes into text content, disregarding element boundaries. I believe it may be impossible to set the input focus inside an inline element with no text in it. Certainly with your example I cannot set focus inside the last element by clicking or arrow keys.
It almost works if you set each span to display: block, though there's still some highly strange behaviour, dependent on the existence of whitespace in the parent. Hacking the display to look inline with tricks like float, inline-block and absolute position make IE treat each element as a separate editing box. Relative-positioned block elements next to each other work, but that's probably impractical.
You could also try adding a zero-width character like ​
document.getElementById('myspan').focus();
#myspan {
border: 0;
outline: 0;
}
<span id="myspan" contenteditable="true">​</span>
The solution was to change <span> to <div> (I've seen that this solves many contenteditable problems in other questions here and there) + to add a min-width.
Indeed, with the following code, the size of the <div> would be 0px x 18px ! That explains why the caret (edit cursor) would be hidden !
HTML
<div id="blah" contenteditable=true></div>
CSS
#blah {
outline: 0;
position: absolute;
top:10px;
left:10px;
}
JS
$("#blah").focus();
Then, adding
min-width: 2px;
in the CSS will allow the caret to be displayed, even with Chrome : http://jsfiddle.net/38e9mkf4/2/
The issue I faced on Chrome v89.0.4389.90 was that contenteditable fields would sometimes show the blinking caret on focusin and sometimes not. I noticed it always blinks when there's already content in the field before focusing. It's when there's no content that the sometimes will/won't behavior occurs.
At first, I thought there must be some conflicting event handler that's erratically taking focus away. I disabled all my event binds and timers. Still the same erratic behavior. Then I thought it might be some conflicting CSS, so I disabled all stylesheets. At least now the behavior was consistent: the caret blinks 100% of the time when the field has content; the caret does not blink 100% of the time when the field has no content.
I enabled binds and stylesheets again. My div was already set to display: block; with min-width, min-height, and padding set in the final computed style set. None of the other answers here worked. I do have a placeholder on :empty:before that was a possible culprit. I commented that out. Now the behavior was consistent again, same as if the stylesheet was off. Oddly enough, the runnable snippet on SO works with the same computed CSS stack. I want to keep the placeholder, so it requires further research with my actual codebase...
The only solution I could get to work 100% of the time with my current issue involved forcibly placing the caret inside empty fields by creating a blank space and removing it immediately afterwards. Best I can do for a workaround until debugging the root cause.
//force caret to blink inside masks
let force_caret = function() {
if (!this.textContent) {
this.textContent = ' ';
let r = document.createRange(),
s = window.getSelection();
r.setStart(this.childNodes[0], 0);
r.collapse(true);
s.removeAllRanges();
s.addRange(r);
this.textContent = '';
}
}
//binds
let els = document.querySelectorAll("[contenteditable]");
for (let i = 0; i < els.length; i++) {
els[i].addEventListener('focusin', force_caret, false);
}
/* styles irrelevant to the issue, added for visual assist */
:root {
--b-soft: 1px solid silver;
--bs-in: inset 0 1px 3px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3), 0 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.1);
--c-soft: gray;
--lg-warm: linear-gradient(30deg, rgb(254, 250, 250), #eedddd);
}
body {
font-family: system-ui, -apple-system, -apple-system-font, 'Segoe UI', 'Roboto', sans-serif;
}
[contenteditable] {
outline: initial;
}
[contenteditable][placeholder]:empty:before {
content: attr(placeholder);
color: var(--c-soft);
background-color: transparent;
font-style: italic;
opacity: .5;
font-size: .9em;
}
.input {
border-bottom: var(--b-soft);
padding: .2em .5em;
}
.input_mask {
display: flex;
align-items: baseline;
color: var(--c-soft);
}
.mask {
box-shadow: var(--bs-in);
border-radius: .2em;
background: var(--lg-warm);
font-weight: 500;
border: 1px solid transparent;
text-transform: uppercase;
/* styles possibly relevant to the issue according to other proposed solutions */
margin: 0 .4em .1em .4em;
padding: .2em .4em;
min-width: 3em;
min-height: 1em;
text-align: center;
}
<div data-type="tel" data-id="phone" class="input input_mask">
<span>+1 (</span>
<div maxlength="3" contenteditable="true" placeholder="111" class="mask"></div>
<span>)</span>
<div maxlength="3" contenteditable="true" placeholder="111" class="mask"></div>
<span>-</span>
<div maxlength="4" contenteditable="true" placeholder="1111" class="mask"></div>
<span>x</span>
<div maxlength="5" contenteditable="true" class="mask"></div>
</div>
Add a CSS style of
min-height: 15px;
you may also need
display: block;
to your contenteditable="true" tag
For me setting it content of contenteditable div to <br> works. I tried setting it to nbsp; but that creates extra character space in the div before i start editing. So, i choose this:
<div id="blah" contenteditable=true><br></div>
over:
<div id="blah" contenteditable=true>nbsp;</div>
Hope this helps.
I use Chrome and your Code works fine.
Try to use cursor: text; in your CSS. See here

I need these buttons to control which div is showing or "on top"

I have these buttons on the side of my page, and a main content area taking up the better part of the page.
What I am trying to do is get the button I click to change the main content to a div containing the corresponding information. This is very hard to find, perhaps because I am searching by the wrong terms, and I have covered a good portion of stackoverflow without much luck.
I have though about absolutely positioning the divs and using a script to change the z-index of the the divs to the highest amount using a "=+1" type situation, but I could see that getting messy.
I have considered adapting a script I have that replaces part of an image file name in order to change a main picture on a page to a larger version of the image corresponding to a thumb name, though this script targets file names so it isn't going well.
I have also tried something along the lines of:
"id of button" onclick function = "main content class" change id to "corresponding div"
only in javascript talk, and this isn't working at all so I can only assume that I am either looking at it wrong or I have some messed up in the code.
$('#tabhead1').click(function() {
document.getElementByClassName("maintab").id = "tabs1";
});
This is driving me crazy and I would really appreciate some ideas. I tried to leave it free formed so that noone gets hung up on anyone solution.
**** Just to clarify, I have 5 divs id'd at #tabhead1, #tabhead2, #tabhead3, etc. and 5 content divs classed as .maintab, and id'd as tabs1, tabs2, tabs3, etc. I need the first content div to show automatically, and for that div to change based on the button clicked. at the moment all content divs are set to display: none; except the first one.
For each button, add a data attribute related to the corresponding <div>
for example
<button id="tabhead1" data-content="tabs1" >first Tab</button>
apply a common class for the tabs, for example .tab
Then you can do the following
$('button').click(function(){
var contentId = $(this).data('content'); // get the id of corresponding tab
$('.tab').hide(); // hide all tabs
$('#'+contentId).show(); //show the corresponding tab
});
You are using getElementbyClassName which does not exists. Use:
document.getElementsByClassName("maintab")[0].id = "tabs1";
// Get all elements to match classname + get first element from array
And for the rest, I don't know why you want to add id with JS? Why not just add them to your HTML?
Try this
$('#tabhead1').click(function() {
// get element with class 'maintab' and replace its content with that of another tab
$(".maintab").html($(".tabs1").html());
});
To expand a little on the demo I posted in the comments earlier:
This uses a method very similar to #tilwin-joy, so I guess we were of like mindedness. There are a couple of small differences that I would point out:
jQuery:
$('button').on('click', function () {
var button = $(this);
var target = button.data('target');
button.prop('disabled', true).siblings().prop('disabled', false);
$(target).show('slow').siblings().hide();
});
This uses siblings to hide the other content (one less pass at the DOM).
I suggest just setting your data value with the id hash in the markup, I think it's a bit clearer to read and follow (IMHO) in both the script and markup.
This script also sets the current button to be disabled when clicked. The benefit of this is that you can use the disabled property to style up your buttons, and even if you don't style them it gives a visual cue to the user as to which tab content is currently displayed. Check out the demo to see how this can be used for styling purposes.
HTML: (I stripped some of the unneeded ids from what you described as your markup).
<div class="tabhead">
<button data-target="#tabs1" disabled="true">Content 1</button>
<button data-target="#tabs2">Content 2</button>
<button data-target="#tabs3">Content 3</button>
<button data-target="#tabs4">Content 4</button>
<button data-target="#tabs5">Content 5</button>
</div>
<div class="maintab">
<div id="tabs1">
<img src="http://placehold.it/350/e8117f/fff&text=Image+1" alt="Image 1" />
<p>This is the content of tabs1.</p>
</div>
<div id="tabs2">
<img src="http://placehold.it/350/9acd32/fff&text=Image+2" alt="Image 2" />
<p>This is the content of tabs2.</p>
</div>
<div id="tabs3">
<img src="http://placehold.it/350/9400d3/fff&text=Image+3" alt="Image 3" />
<p>This is the content of tabs3.</p>
</div>
<div id="tabs4">
<img src="http://placehold.it/350/ffd700/fff&text=Image+4" alt="Image 4" />
<p>This is the content of tabs4.</p>
</div>
<div id="tabs5">
<img src="http://placehold.it/350/1e90ff/fff&text=Image+5" alt="Image 5" />
<p>This is the content of tabs5.</p>
</div>
</div>
CSS: Not needed - just to give you an idea of how you can style the elements to look like tabs.
/*This sets all but the first tab to hidden when the page is loaded*/
.maintab>div:not(:first-child) {
display: none;
}
/*The rest is just to style the elements to look like tabs*/
body {
background-color: #eaeaea;
}
.maintab, .tabhead {
text-align: center;
margin:0 20px;
font-family: sans-serif;
}
.maintab {
border: 1px solid #1e90ff;
border-top: none;
padding-top: 20px;
background-color: #fff;
}
.tabhead {
border-bottom: 1px solid #1e90ff;
position: relative;
margin-top: 20px;
}
button {
background-color: #ccc;
padding: 10px;
border: 1px solid #999;
border-bottom: none;
-webkit-border-top-left-radius: 4px;
-webkit-border-top-right-radius: 4px;
-moz-border-radius-topleft: 4px;
-moz-border-radius-topright: 4px;
border-top-left-radius: 4px;
border-top-right-radius: 4px;
color: #999;
font-size: 14px;
cursor: pointer;
position: relative;
top: 2px;
}
button:disabled {
background-color: #fff;
border-color: #1e90ff;
color: #1e90ff;
top: 3px;
padding-top: 11px;
cursor: not-allowed;
z-index: 10;
}

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