Unicorns are a mythical creature, and so is that use of parentheses.
Could this be the syntax you were looking for?
(function() {
var $ = window.jQuery;
$("#CollapseExpandTd").click(
function() {
$("#TreeviewTd").toggle();
$("#MenuBarTd").toggle();
});
})();
That puts all the code inside a function, and then immediately calls the
function.
Now you have all the unicornish magic you were looking for, without the
mythical aspects. :-)
-Mike
On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Leonardo Balter
<[email protected]>wrote:
> Nah, make it sexier, use parenteses (tip from the new John Resig's ebook):
>
> ( var $ = window.jQuery;
> $("#CollapseExpandTd").click(
> function() {
> $("#TreeviewTd").toggle();
> $("#MenuBarTd").toggle();
> });
> );
>
> $ will be a local variable and unicorns will come to see the magic running
> around.
>
> 2009/12/23 jqHunter <[email protected]>
>
> Thanks much Sime Vidas, it worked! Since mine is an aspx with an AJAX
>> UpdatePanel, jQuery(document).ready(function(){...}); did not work for
>> me. So I implented it in the pageLoad as below:
>>
>> jQuery.noConflict();
>> function pageLoad() {
>> jQuery("#CollapseExpandTd").click(function() {
>> jQuery("#TreeviewTd").toggle();
>> jQuery("#MenuBarTd").toggle();
>> });
>> }
>>
>> Thanks again!
>>
>
>
>
> --
> At,
> Leo Balter
> http://leobalter.net
> Blog técnico: http://blog.leobalter.net
>
>