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Home/ Questions/Q 860985
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T08:54:17+00:00 2026-05-15T08:54:17+00:00

So I have an issue, when I load a document, I have a class

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So I have an issue, when I load a document, I have a class called .active which changes depending on what list item you are viewing using keyboard navigation. The problem is when that list item has the class active assigned to it, I would like that list item only, on hover, to display another piece of content.. But the problem is, I believe, that my hover function is only firing on page load, and only attaching to whatever list item has .active assigned to it on load..

<ul>
<li class="active">Foo <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
<li>Bar <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
<li>Pie <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
</ul>

When a user uses their keyboard navigation the previous list item will not longer have .active and the next one will be assigned the class as follows:

<ul>
<li>Foo <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
<li class="active">Bar <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
<li>Pie <a class="more-info" href="#">Click Me</a></li>
</ul>

What I would like to happen is that when a user hovers the new list item, they are presented with the a.more-info but it does not work. I believe again, this is because the .hover(); only runs once on page load and is not listening the whole time..

 $("li.active").hover(
    function () {
        $('li.active a.more-info').fadeIn();
    },
    function () {
        $('li.active a.more-info').fadeOut();
    });

Any ideas?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T08:54:18+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 8:54 am

    (…) and only attaching to whatever list item has .active assigned to it on load

    You are right, the handler is only attached to those li elements, that have a class active. But you can check which class they have at runtime:

     $("li").hover( // attach the handler all li elements
        function () {
            if($(this).hasClass('active'))  // check for 'active' class
                $('a.more-info', this).fadeIn();
        },
        function () {
            if($(this).hasClass('active'))
                $('a.more-info', this).fadeOut();
     });
    

    Assuming that all list elements are present when you load the page. Otherwise you have to combine it with live(). Note, you don’t need live() if you don’t load the lists via Ajax.

    I believe again, this is because the .hover(); only runs once on page load and is not listening the whole time..

    That is not correct. The handler is only attached on page load (so yes your function call is only executed once). But the event is fired always when the mouse cursor is over an <li> element. Then the handler is called.

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