I have the following code It takes a <ul> and it drops down the contents when clicked. That works great. The problem was that it would also close other menus of the same type when a child <li> was clicked.
I ‘fixed’ this problem by using the if clause to determine if the item being clicked was also the item that was currently open, but I want to take it a step further and make it so that if the parent ul is clicked again, it will close the menu. I am having a great deal of misunderstanding as to how to approach this. I attempted to stop the propagation of the children elements, but it yields the same results. Can anyone assist?
wiring (document load)
$(document).ready(function () {
$('[data-role="sidebar-dropdown"]').drawer({
open: 'sidebar-dropdown-open',
css: '.sidebar-dropdown-open'
});
});
html
<ul>
<li class=" dropdown" data-role="sidebar-dropdown">
<a href="pages/.." class="remote">Link Text</a>
<ul class="sub-menu light sidebar-dropdown-menu">
<li><a class="remote" href="pages/...">Link Text</a></li>
<li><a class="remote" href="pages/...">Link Text</a></li>
<li><a class="remote" href="pages/...">Link Text</a></li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
JavaScript
(function ($) {
$.fn.drawer = function (options) {
// Create some defaults, extending them with any options that were provided
var settings = $.extend({
open: 'open',
css: '.open'
}, options);
return this.each(function () {
$(this).on('click', function (e) {
// slide up all open dropdown menus
$(settings.css).not($(this)).each(function () {
$(this).removeClass(settings.open);
// retrieve the appropriate menu item
var $menu = $(this).children(".dropdown-menu, .sidebar-dropdown-menu");
// slide down the one clicked on.
$menu.slideUp('fast');
$menu.removeClass('active');
});
// mark this menu as open
$(this).addClass(settings.open);
// retrieve the appropriate menu item
var $menu = $(this).children(".dropdown-menu, .sidebar-dropdown-menu");
// slide down the one clicked on.
$menu.slideDown(100);
$menu.addClass('active');
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
}).on("mouseleave", function () {
$(this).children(".dropdown-menu").hide().delay(300);
});
})
};
})(jQuery);
In jQuery events you can read the node which initiated the event by referencing
e.target.Regarding closing elements which are not children, instead of doing a global selector
$(selector)you should instead do a selector relative to your initiating dom node. It’s a common practice to passthisand stashing it inside your jQuery plugin.return this.each(function(this)) { var $node = $(this); }Then all lookups would be done like
$node.find(selector).doStuff()