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Live Query utilizes the power of jQuery selectors by firing callbacks for matched elements auto-magically, even after the page has been loaded and the DOM updated.
Live Query fires a function (callback) when it matches a new element and another function (callback) for when an element is no longer matched. This provides ultimate flexibility and untold use-cases. For example the following code uses a function based Live Query to implement the jQuery hover helper method and remove it when the element is no longer matched.
$('li') .livequery(function(){ // use the helper function hover to bind a mouseover and mouseout event $(this) .hover(function() { $(this).addClass('hover'); }, function() { $(this).removeClass('hover'); }); }, function() { // unbind the mouseover and mouseout events $(this) .unbind('mouseover') .unbind('mouseout'); });
livequery
signatures livequery
method has 2 different signatures or ways to call it.
Pass one or two functions to livequery
. Doing this, livequery
will call the
first passed function when an element is newly matched and will call the second
passed function when an element is removed or no longer matched. The second
function is optional. The this
or context of the first function will be the
newly matched element. For the second function it will be the element that is
no longer matched.
// matchedFn: the function to execute when a new element is matched $(selector).livequery( matchedFn ); // matchedFn: the function to execute when a new element is matched // unmatchedFn: the function to execute when an element is no longer matched $(selector).livequery( matchedFn, unmatchFn );
expire
signatures expire
method has 3 different signatures or ways to call it.
The first way will stop/expire all live queries associated with the selector.
$(selector).expire();
The second way will stop/expire all live queries associated with the selector and matchedFn.
// matchedFn: the function to execute when a new element is matched $(selector).expire( matchedFn );
The third way will stop/expire all live queries associated with the selector, matchedFn, and unmatchedFn.
// matchedFn: the function to execute when a new element is matched // unmatchedFn: the function to execute when an element is no longer matched $(selector).expire( matchedFn, unmatchFn );
If your plugin modifies the DOM without using the built-in DOM Modification methods (append, addClass, etc), you can register your plugin with Live Query like this.
if (jQuery.livequery) jQuery.livequery.registerPlugin("pluginMethodName");
You can register several plugin methods at once by just passing them as additional arguments to the registerPlugin method.
if (jQuery.livequery) jQuery.livequery.registerPlugin("method1", "method2", "method3");
livequery
code to prepare the page to process any dom element of class trigger
when no matter when it appears.
%STARTSECTION{"javascript"}% <litreral> <script> jQuery(function($) { $(".trigger").livequery( function() { var $this = $(this); $this.css({ color:'#fff', background:'#b20000', display:'inline-block', padding:'0.5em' }); //alert("there's a new trigger"); }, function() { //alert("there's a trigger going offline"); } ); // adds the refresh behavior $(".refresh").click(function() { $("#loader").trigger("refresh"); return false; }); }); </script> </literal> %ENDSECTION{"javascript"}%This is the content to be loaded asynchronously. It contains a div element with a
trigger
class. This div will be
processed by an event handler registered using livequery
.
%STARTSECTION{"loadme"}% <div class="trigger">hello world</div> %ENDSECTION{"loadme"}%This is a JQueryLoader that will load the content of the
loadme
section below one with a delay of two second.