I am using Javascript(with Mootools) to dynamically build a large page using HTML "template" elements, copying the same template many times to populate the page. Within each template I use string keywords that need to be replaced to create the unique IDs. I'm having serious performance issues however in that it takes multiple seconds to perform all these replacements, especially in IE. The code looks like this:
var fieldTemplate = $$('.fieldTemplate')[0];
var fieldTr = fieldTemplate.clone(true, true);
fieldTr.removeClass('fieldTemplate');
replaceIdsHelper(fieldTr, ':FIELD_NODE_ID:', fieldNodeId);
parentTable.grab(fieldTr);
replaceIdsHelper() is the problem method according to IE9's profiler. I've tried two implementations of this method:
// Retrieve the entire HTML body of the element, replace the string and set the HTML back.
var html = rootElem.get('html').replace(new RegExp(replaceStr, 'g'), id);
rootElem.set('html', html);
and
// Load the child elements and replace just their IDs selectively
rootElem.getElements('*').each(function(elem) {
var elemId = elem.get('id');
if (elemId != null) elemId = elemId.replace(replaceStr, id);
elem.set('id', elemId)
});
However, both of these approaches are extremely slow given how many times this method gets called(about 200...). Everything else runs fine, it's only replacing these IDs which seems to be a major performance bottleneck. Does anyone know if there's a way to do this efficiently, or a reason it might be running so slow? The elements start hidden and aren't grabbed by the DOM until after they're created so there's no redrawing happening.
By the way, the reason I'm building the page this way is to keep the code clean, since we need to be able to create new elements dynamically after loading as well. Doing this from the server side would make things much more complicated.
I'm not 100% sure, but it sounds to me that the problem is with the indexing of the dom tree.
First of all, do you must use ids or can you manage with classes? since you say that the replacement of the id is the main issue.
Also, why do you clone part of the dom tree instead of just inserting a new html?
You can use the substitute method of String (when using MooTools), like so:
var template = '<div id="{ID}" class="{CLASSES}">{CONTENT}</div>';
template.substitute({ID: "id1", CLASSES: "c1 c2", CONTENT: "this is the content" });
you can read more about it here http://mootools.net/docs/core/Types/String#String:substitute
Then, just take that string and put it as html inside a container, let's say:
$("container_id").set("html", template);
I think that it might improve the efficiency since it does not clone and then index it again, but I can't be sure. give it a go and see what happens.
there are some things you can do to optimise it - and what #nizan tomer said is very good, the pseudo templating is a good pattern.
First of all.
var fieldTemplate = $$('.fieldTemplate')[0];
var fieldTr = fieldTemplate.clone(true, true);
you should do this as:
var templateHTML = somenode.getElement(".fieldTemplate").get("html"); // no need to clone it.
the template itself should/can be like suggested, eg:
<td id="{id}">{something}</td>
only read it once, no need to clone it for every item - instead, use the new Element constructor and just set the innerHTML - notice it lacks the <tr> </tr>.
if you have an object with data, eg:
var rows = [{
id: "row1",
something: "hello"
}, {
id: "row2",
something: "there"
}];
Array.each(function(obj, index) {
var newel = new Element("tr", {
html: templateHTML.substitute(obj)
});
// defer the inject so it's non-blocking of the UI thread:
newel.inject.delay(10, newel, parentTable);
// if you need to know when done, use a counter + index
// in a function and fire a ready.
});
alternatively, use document fragments:
Element.implement({
docFragment: function(){
return document.createDocumentFragment();
}
});
(function() {
var fragment = Element.docFragment();
Array.each(function(obj) {
fragment.appendChild(new Element("tr", {
html: templateHTML.substitute(obj)
}));
});
// inject all in one go, single dom access
parentTable.appendChild(fragment);
})();
I did a jsperf test on both of these methods:
http://jsperf.com/inject-vs-fragment-in-mootools
surprising win by chrome by a HUGE margin vs firefox and ie9. also surprising, in firefox individual injects are faster than fragments. perhaps the bottleneck is that it's TRs in a table, which has always been dodgy.
For templating: you can also look at using something like mustache or underscore.js templates.
ok. I have a dropdown. well call it dropdownA. I have several arrays already fashioned, that i want to loop through, and put each individual value out onto the page into it's own input field, based on the selection in the dropdown. I know how to put together the loop to get the values out onto the page. anyway, here is the meta code.
meta1array=new Array('','','','','','');
meta2array=new Array('','','','','','');
meta3array=new Array('','','','','','');
function metacode(id){
{
var a=get.the.dd.selIndex;
var b=get.the.dd.options[a].value; //comes back as 'meta1'. other opts are meta2, meta3
var c=b+'array';
for(i=0;i<c.count;i++)
{
loop here to popout values
}
}
i have looked everywhere, and i haven't come up with anything. I also admit that my brain is starting to mushify from a few weeks straight of coding, and this is the first time i have come across this. so, please. i would be greatful for any help.
Global variables are members of the window object.
var c = window[b + 'array'];
It might be wise to make your arrays members of some other object though, for tighter scoping (avoid cluttering the global namespace).
metaobject = {
meta1array: ['','','','',''],
meta2array: ['','','','',''],
meta3array: ['','','','','']
};
// snip
var arr = metaobject[b + 'array'];
for(var i=0;i<arr.length;i++) {
//do work
}
Check out the fiddle using jquery here.
I'm writing a jquery-plugin, that changes a css-value of certain elements on certain user-actions.
On other actions the css-value should be reseted to their initial value.
As I found no way to get the initial css-values back, I just created an array that stores all initial values in the beginning.
I did this with:
var initialCSSValue = new Array()
quite in the beginning of my plugin and later, in some kind of setup-loop where all my elements get accessed I used
initialCSSValue[$(this)] = parseInt($(this).css('<CSS-attribute>'));
This works very fine in Firefox.
However, I just found out, that IE (even v8) has problems with accessing the certain value again using
initialCSSValue[$(this)]
somewhere else in the code. I think this is due to the fact, that I use an object ($(this)) as a variable-name.
Is there a way arround this problem?
Thank you
Use $(this).data()
At first I was going to suggest using a combination of the ID and the attribute name, but every object might not have an ID. Instead, use the jQuery Data functions to attach the information directly to the element for easy, unique, access.
Do something like this (Where <CSS-attribute> is replaced with the css attribute name):
$(this).data('initial-<CSS-attribute>', parseInt( $(this).css('<CSS-attribute>') ) );
Then you can access it again like this:
$(this).data('initial-<CSS-attribute>');
Alternate way using data:
In your plugin, you could make a little helper function like this, if you wanted to avoid too much data usage:
var saveCSS = function (el, css_attribute ) {
var data = $(el).data('initial-css');
if(!data) data = {};
data[css_attribute] = $(el).css(css_attribute);
$(el).data('initial-css', data);
}
var readCSS = function (el, css_attribute) {
var data = $(el).data('initial-css');
if(data && data[css_attribute])
return data[css_attribute];
else
return "";
}
Indexing an array with a jQuery object seems fishy. I'd use the ID of the object to key the array.
initialCSSValue[$(this).attr("id")] = parseInt...
Oh please, don't do that... :)
Write some CSS and use the addClass and removeClass - it leaves the styles untouched afterwards.
if anybody wants to see the plugin in action, see it here:
http://www.sj-wien.at/leopoldstadt/zeug/marcel/slidlabel/jsproblem.html
Locked. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
Syntax
Shorthand for the ready-event by roosteronacid
Line breaks and chainability by roosteronacid
Nesting filters by Nathan Long
Cache a collection and execute commands on the same line by roosteronacid
Contains selector by roosteronacid
Defining properties at element creation by roosteronacid
Access jQuery functions as you would an array by roosteronacid
The noConflict function - Freeing up the $ variable by Oli
Isolate the $ variable in noConflict mode by nickf
No-conflict mode by roosteronacid
Data Storage
The data function - bind data to elements by TenebrousX
HTML5 data attributes support, on steroids! by roosteronacid
The jQuery metadata plug-in by Filip Dupanović
Optimization
Optimize performance of complex selectors by roosteronacid
The context parameter by lupefiasco
Save and reuse searches by Nathan Long
Creating an HTML Element and keeping a reference, Checking if an element exists, Writing your own selectors by Andreas Grech
Miscellaneous
Check the index of an element in a collection by redsquare
Live event handlers by TM
Replace anonymous functions with named functions by ken
Microsoft AJAX framework and jQuery bridge by Slace
jQuery tutorials by egyamado
Remove elements from a collection and preserve chainability by roosteronacid
Declare $this at the beginning of anonymous functions by Ben
FireBug lite, Hotbox plug-in, tell when an image has been loaded and Google CDN by Colour Blend
Judicious use of third-party jQuery scripts by harriyott
The each function by Jan Zich
Form Extensions plug-in by Chris S
Asynchronous each function by OneNerd
The jQuery template plug-in: implementing complex logic using render-functions by roosteronacid
Creating an HTML Element and keeping a reference
var newDiv = $("<div />");
newDiv.attr("id", "myNewDiv").appendTo("body");
/* Now whenever I want to append the new div I created,
I can just reference it from the "newDiv" variable */
Checking if an element exists
if ($("#someDiv").length)
{
// It exists...
}
Writing your own selectors
$.extend($.expr[":"], {
over100pixels: function (e)
{
return $(e).height() > 100;
}
});
$(".box:over100pixels").click(function ()
{
alert("The element you clicked is over 100 pixels height");
});
jQuery's data() method is useful and not well known. It allows you to bind data to DOM elements without modifying the DOM.
Nesting Filters
You can nest filters (as nickf showed here).
.filter(":not(:has(.selected))")
I'm really not a fan of the $(document).ready(fn) shortcut. Sure it cuts down on the code but it also cuts way down on the readability of the code. When you see $(document).ready(...), you know what you're looking at. $(...) is used in far too many other ways to immediately make sense.
If you have multiple frameworks you can use jQuery.noConflict(); as you say, but you can also assign a different variable for it like this:
var $j = jQuery.noConflict();
$j("#myDiv").hide();
Very useful if you have several frameworks that can be boiled down to $x(...)-style calls.
Ooooh, let's not forget jQuery metadata! The data() function is great, but it has to be populated via jQuery calls.
Instead of breaking W3C compliance with custom element attributes such as:
<input
name="email"
validation="required"
validate="email"
minLength="7"
maxLength="30"/>
Use metadata instead:
<input
name="email"
class="validation {validate: email, minLength: 2, maxLength: 50}" />
<script>
jQuery('*[class=validation]').each(function () {
var metadata = $(this).metadata();
// etc.
});
</script>
Live Event Handlers
Set an event handler for any element that matches a selector, even if it gets added to the DOM after the initial page load:
$('button.someClass').live('click', someFunction);
This allows you to load content via ajax, or add them via javascript and have the event handlers get set up properly for those elements automatically.
Likewise, to stop the live event handling:
$('button.someClass').die('click', someFunction);
These live event handlers have a few limitations compared to regular events, but they work great for the majority of cases.
For more info see the jQuery Documentation.
UPDATE: live() and die() are deprecated in jQuery 1.7. See http://api.jquery.com/on/ and http://api.jquery.com/off/ for similar replacement functionality.
UPDATE2: live() has been long deprecated, even before jQuery 1.7. For versions jQuery 1.4.2+ before 1.7 use delegate() and undelegate(). The live() example ($('button.someClass').live('click', someFunction);) can be rewritten using delegate() like that: $(document).delegate('button.someClass', 'click', someFunction);.
Replace anonymous functions with named functions. This really supercedes the jQuery context, but it comes into play more it seems like when using jQuery, due to its reliance on callback functions. The problems I have with inline anonymous functions, are that they are harder to debug (much easier to look at a callstack with distinctly-named functions, instead 6 levels of "anonymous"), and also the fact that multiple anonymous functions within the same jQuery-chain can become unwieldy to read and/or maintain. Additionally, anonymous functions are typically not re-used; on the other hand, declaring named functions encourages me to write code that is more likely to be re-used.
An illustration; instead of:
$('div').toggle(
function(){
// do something
},
function(){
// do something else
}
);
I prefer:
function onState(){
// do something
}
function offState(){
// do something else
}
$('div').toggle( offState, onState );
Defining properties at element creation
In jQuery 1.4 you can use an object literal to define properties when you create an element:
var e = $("<a />", { href: "#", class: "a-class another-class", title: "..." });
... You can even add styles:
$("<a />", {
...
css: {
color: "#FF0000",
display: "block"
}
});
Here's a link to the documentation.
instead of using a different alias for the jQuery object (when using noConflict), I always write my jQuery code by wrapping it all in a closure. This can be done in the document.ready function:
var $ = someOtherFunction(); // from a different library
jQuery(function($) {
if ($ instanceOf jQuery) {
alert("$ is the jQuery object!");
}
});
alternatively you can do it like this:
(function($) {
$('...').etc() // whatever jQuery code you want
})(jQuery);
I find this to be the most portable. I've been working on a site which uses both Prototype AND jQuery simultaneously and these techniques have avoided all conflicts.
Check the Index
jQuery has .index but it is a pain to use, as you need the list of elements, and pass in the element you want the index of:
var index = e.g $('#ul>li').index( liDomObject );
The following is much easier:
If you want to know the index of an element within a set (e.g. list items) within a unordered list:
$("ul > li").click(function () {
var index = $(this).prevAll().length;
});
Shorthand for the ready-event
The explicit and verbose way:
$(document).ready(function ()
{
// ...
});
The shorthand:
$(function ()
{
// ...
});
On the core jQuery function, specify the context parameter in addition to the selector parameter. Specifying the context parameter allows jQuery to start from a deeper branch in the DOM, rather than from the DOM root. Given a large enough DOM, specifying the context parameter should translate to performance gains.
Example: Finds all inputs of type radio within the first form in the document.
$("input:radio", document.forms[0]);
Reference: http://docs.jquery.com/Core/jQuery#expressioncontext
Not really jQuery only but I made a nice little bridge for jQuery and MS AJAX:
Sys.UI.Control.prototype.j = function Sys$UI$Control$j(){
return $('#' + this.get_id());
}
It's really nice if you're doing lots of ASP.NET AJAX, since jQuery is supported by MS now having a nice bridge means it's really easy to do jQuery operations:
$get('#myControl').j().hide();
So the above example isn't great, but if you're writing ASP.NET AJAX server controls, makes it easy to have jQuery inside your client-side control implementation.
Optimize performance of complex selectors
Query a subset of the DOM when using complex selectors drastically improves performance:
var subset = $("");
$("input[value^='']", subset);
Speaking of Tips and Tricks and as well some tutorials. I found these series of tutorials (“jQuery for Absolute Beginners” Video Series) by Jeffery Way are VERY HELPFUL.
It targets those developers who are new to jQuery. He shows how to create many cool stuff with jQuery, like animation, Creating and Removing Elements and more...
I learned a lot from it. He shows how it's easy to use jQuery.
Now I love it and i can read and understand any jQuery script even if it's complex.
Here is one example I like "Resizing Text"
1- jQuery...
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$('a').click(function() {
var originalSize = $('p').css('font-size'); // get the font size
var number = parseFloat(originalSize, 10); // that method will chop off any integer from the specified variable "originalSize"
var unitOfMeasure = originalSize.slice(-2);// store the unit of measure, Pixle or Inch
$('p').css('font-size', number / 1.2 + unitOfMeasure);
if(this.id == 'larger'){$('p').css('font-size', number * 1.2 + unitOfMeasure);}// figure out which element is triggered
});
});
</script>
2- CSS Styling...
<style type="text/css" >
body{ margin-left:300px;text-align:center; width:700px; background-color:#666666;}
.box {width:500px; text-align:justify; padding:5px; font-family:verdana; font-size:11px; color:#0033FF; background-color:#FFFFCC;}
</style>
2- HTML...
<div class="box">
Larger |
Smaller
<p>
In today’s video tutorial, I’ll show you how to resize text every time an associated anchor tag is clicked. We’ll be examining the “slice”, “parseFloat”, and “CSS” Javascript/jQuery methods.
</p>
</div>
Highly recommend these tutorials...
http://blog.themeforest.net/screencasts/jquery-for-absolute-beginners-video-series/
Asynchronous each() function
If you have really complex documents where running the jquery each() function locks up the browser during the iteration, and/or Internet Explorer pops up the 'do you want to continue running this script' message, this solution will save the day.
jQuery.forEach = function (in_array, in_pause_ms, in_callback)
{
if (!in_array.length) return; // make sure array was sent
var i = 0; // starting index
bgEach(); // call the function
function bgEach()
{
if (in_callback.call(in_array[i], i, in_array[i]) !== false)
{
i++; // move to next item
if (i < in_array.length) setTimeout(bgEach, in_pause_ms);
}
}
return in_array; // returns array
};
jQuery.fn.forEach = function (in_callback, in_optional_pause_ms)
{
if (!in_optional_pause_ms) in_optional_pause_ms = 10; // default
return jQuery.forEach(this, in_optional_pause_ms, in_callback); // run it
};
The first way you can use it is just like each():
$('your_selector').forEach( function() {} );
An optional 2nd parameter lets you specify the speed/delay in between iterations which may be useful for animations (the following example will wait 1 second in between iterations):
$('your_selector').forEach( function() {}, 1000 );
Remember that since this works asynchronously, you can't rely on the iterations to be complete before the next line of code, for example:
$('your_selector').forEach( function() {}, 500 );
// next lines of code will run before above code is complete
I wrote this for an internal project, and while I am sure it can be improved, it worked for what we needed, so hope some of you find it useful. Thanks -
Syntactic shorthand-sugar-thing--Cache an object collection and execute commands on one line:
Instead of:
var jQueryCollection = $("");
jQueryCollection.command().command();
I do:
var jQueryCollection = $("").command().command();
A somewhat "real" use case could be something along these lines:
var cache = $("#container div.usehovereffect").mouseover(function ()
{
cache.removeClass("hover").filter(this).addClass("hover");
});
I like declare a $this variable at the beginning of anonymous functions, so I know I can reference a jQueried this.
Like so:
$('a').each(function() {
var $this = $(this);
// Other code
});
Save jQuery Objects in Variables for Reuse
Saving a jQuery object to a variable lets you reuse it without having to search back through the DOM to find it.
(As #Louis suggested, I now use $ to indicate that a variable holds a jQuery object.)
// Bad: searching the DOM multiple times for the same elements
$('div.foo').each...
$('div.foo').each...
// Better: saving that search for re-use
var $foos = $('div.foo');
$foos.each...
$foos.each...
As a more complex example, say you've got a list of foods in a store, and you want to show only the ones that match a user's criteria. You have a form with checkboxes, each one containing a criteria. The checkboxes have names like organic and lowfat, and the products have corresponding classes - .organic, etc.
var $allFoods, $matchingFoods;
$allFoods = $('div.food');
Now you can keep working with that jQuery object. Every time a checkbox is clicked (to check or uncheck), start from the master list of foods and filter down based on the checked boxes:
// Whenever a checkbox in the form is clicked (to check or uncheck)...
$someForm.find('input:checkbox').click(function(){
// Start out assuming all foods should be showing
// (in case a checkbox was just unchecked)
var $matchingFoods = $allFoods;
// Go through all the checked boxes and keep only the foods with
// a matching class
this.closest('form').find("input:checked").each(function() {
$matchingFoods = $matchingFoods.filter("." + $(this).attr("name"));
});
// Hide any foods that don't match the criteria
$allFoods.not($matchingFoods).hide();
});
It seems that most of the interesting and important tips have been already mentioned, so this one is just a little addition.
The little tip is the jQuery.each(object, callback) function. Everybody is probably using the jQuery.each(callback) function to iterate over the jQuery object itself because it is natural. The jQuery.each(object, callback) utility function iterates over objects and arrays. For a long time, I somehow did not see what it could be for apart from a different syntax (I don’t mind writing all fashioned loops), and I’m a bit ashamed that I realized its main strength only recently.
The thing is that since the body of the loop in jQuery.each(object, callback) is a function, you get a new scope every time in the loop which is especially convenient when you create closures in the loop.
In other words, a typical common mistake is to do something like:
var functions = [];
var someArray = [1, 2, 3];
for (var i = 0; i < someArray.length; i++) {
functions.push(function() { alert(someArray[i]) });
}
Now, when you invoke the functions in the functions array, you will get three times alert with the content undefined which is most likely not what you wanted. The problem is that there is just one variable i, and all three closures refer to it. When the loop finishes, the final value of i is 3, and someArrary[3] is undefined. You could work around it by calling another function which would create the closure for you. Or you use the jQuery utility which it will basically do it for you:
var functions = [];
var someArray = [1, 2, 3];
$.each(someArray, function(item) {
functions.push(function() { alert(item) });
});
Now, when you invoke the functions you get three alerts with the content 1, 2 and 3 as expected.
In general, it is nothing you could not do yourself, but it’s nice to have.
Access jQuery functions as you would an array
Add/remove a class based on a boolean...
function changeState(b)
{
$("selector")[b ? "addClass" : "removeClass"]("name of the class");
}
Is the shorter version of...
function changeState(b)
{
if (b)
{
$("selector").addClass("name of the class");
}
else
{
$("selector").removeClass("name of the class");
}
}
Not that many use-cases for this. Never the less; I think it's neat :)
Update
Just in case you are not the comment-reading-type, ThiefMaster points out that the toggleClass accepts a boolean value, which determines if a class should be added or removed. So as far as my example code above goes, this would be the best approach...
$('selector').toggleClass('name_of_the_class', true/false);
Update:
Just include this script on the site and you’ll get a Firebug console that pops up for debugging in any browser. Not quite as full featured but it’s still pretty helpful! Remember to remove it when you are done.
<script type='text/javascript' src='http://getfirebug.com/releases/lite/1.2/firebug-lite-compressed.js'></script>
Check out this link:
From CSS Tricks
Update:
I found something new; its the the JQuery Hotbox.
JQuery Hotbox
Google hosts several JavaScript libraries on Google Code. Loading it from there saves bandwidth and it loads quick cos it has already been cached.
<script src="http://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Load jQuery
google.load("jquery", "1.2.6");
google.setOnLoadCallback(function() {
// Your code goes here.
});
</script>
Or
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.6/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
You can also use this to tell when an image is fully loaded.
$('#myImage').attr('src', 'image.jpg').load(function() {
alert('Image Loaded');
});
The "console.info" of firebug, which you can use to dump messages and variables to the screen without having to use alert boxes. "console.time" allows you to easily set up a timer to wrap a bunch of code and see how long it takes.
console.time('create list');
for (i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
var myList = $('.myList');
myList.append('This is list item ' + i);
}
console.timeEnd('create list');
Use filtering methods over pseudo selectors when possible so jQuery can use querySelectorAll (which is much faster than sizzle). Consider this selector:
$('.class:first')
The same selection can be made using:
$('.class').eq(0)
Which is must faster because the initial selection of '.class' is QSA compatible
Remove elements from a collection and preserve chainability
Consider the following:
<ul>
<li>One</li>
<li>Two</li>
<li>Three</li>
<li>Four</li>
<li>Five</li>
</ul>
$("li").filter(function()
{
var text = $(this).text();
// return true: keep current element in the collection
if (text === "One" || text === "Two") return true;
// return false: remove current element from the collection
return false;
}).each(function ()
{
// this will alert: "One" and "Two"
alert($(this).text());
});
The filter() function removes elements from the jQuery object. In this case: All li-elements not containing the text "One" or "Two" will be removed.
Changing the type of an input element
I ran into this issue when I was trying to change the type of an input element already attached to the DOM. You have to clone the existing element, insert it before the old element, and then delete the old element. Otherwise it doesn't work:
var oldButton = jQuery("#Submit");
var newButton = oldButton.clone();
newButton.attr("type", "button");
newButton.attr("id", "newSubmit");
newButton.insertBefore(oldButton);
oldButton.remove();
newButton.attr("id", "Submit");
Judicious use of third-party jQuery scripts, such as form field validation or url parsing. It's worth seeing what's about so you'll know when you next encounter a JavaScript requirement.
Line-breaks and chainability
When chaining multiple calls on collections...
$("a").hide().addClass().fadeIn().hide();
You can increase readability with linebreaks. Like this:
$("a")
.hide()
.addClass()
.fadeIn()
.hide();
Use .stop(true,true) when triggering an animation prevents it from repeating the animation. This is especially helpful for rollover animations.
$("#someElement").hover(function(){
$("div.desc", this).stop(true,true).fadeIn();
},function(){
$("div.desc", this).fadeOut();
});
Using self-executing anonymous functions in a method call such as .append() to iterate through something. I.E.:
$("<ul>").append((function ()
{
var data = ["0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6"],
output = $("<div>"),
x = -1,
y = data.length;
while (++x < y) output.append("<li>" + info[x] + "</li>");
return output.children();
}()));
I use this to iterate through things that would be large and uncomfortable to break out of my chaining to build.
HTML5 data attributes support, on steroids!
The data function has been mentioned before. With it, you are able to associate data with DOM elements.
Recently the jQuery team has added support for HTML5 custom data-* attributes. And as if that wasn't enough; they've force-fed the data function with steroids, which means that you are able to store complex objects in the form of JSON, directly in your markup.
The HTML:
<p data-xyz = '{"str": "hi there", "int": 2, "obj": { "arr": [1, 2, 3] } }' />
The JavaScript:
var data = $("p").data("xyz");
data.str // "hi there"
typeof data.str // "string"
data.int + 2 // 4
typeof data.int // "number"
data.obj.arr.join(" + ") + " = 6" // "1 + 2 + 3 = 6"
typeof data.obj.arr // "object" ... Gobbles! Errrghh!