what is the difference between $("#context .searched") and $(".searched",$("#context"))?
I had that question in mind for a long time.
Theo开发者_如何学运维retically, jQuery core function accepts an optional value that can be a DOM element - $(".searched",$("#context")[0])
- or a jQuery object - $(".searched",$("#context") )
.
I discovered that last question reading that fine article.
But i really cant see the difference between use a context and pass a more complex css expression. If there is no difference in the way it works, is there any perfomance difference?
Thanks
It gets converted to a DOM element (in Sizzle, the context portion) to search in either of your cases, ultimately doing a .find()
under the covers.
If you're concerned about performance (why not be as fast as possible?), you should use this instead:
$("#context .searched")
This version gets converted back into a jQuery object:
$("#context")[0]
So it's a bit slower on the jquery side, since it has to be wrapped in a jquery object before the .find()
call, that performance difference is very minimal, but it's the only difference so I'm noting it :)
The major difference would be that $(".searched", context);
can take a variable as a context as well. It is effectively doing $(context).find('.searched');
under the hood, and I think the second version is more readable anyway, so I usually use that.
The use for this situation would be something like this:
$.fn.highlightSearch = function() {
return this.each(function() {
$('.searched', this).addClass('highlighted');
// the commented line performs the same thing:
// $(this).find('.searched').addClass('highlighted');
});
};
$('#context').highlightSearch();
$('.somethingElse').highlightSearch();
Notice that in this case, you can't simply append the new selector on the end of the original.
If you have no other reason to hold a copy of $('#context')
, then using $('#context .searched')
is going to be quicker, and simpler. However, if you already had $('#context')
stored in a variable, its better to use .find(select)
or the $(selector, context)
form to search for your contained elements.
Readability: a CSS selector like $("#context .searched")
is far more readable than the other.
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