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I’m having trouble understanding the use of this.
I have the following structure:
<div id="a" class="clsa">
bbb
</div>
<div id="b" class="clsb">
<span id="bb" clsbb> Conteudo bb </span>
</div>
I wanted to attack any of the elements at the time of reading it. I am doing this way and this working:
$("#a").ready(function() {
//Chamando uma função e passando parametros funcionar normalmente, eu queria poder atacar daqui de dentro este mesmo elemento "#a".
})
Now I wish I could take the span of b following the same idea of the previous one and attack this span:
$("#b").ready(function() {
//Chamar o span e atacar ele (fazer alguma coisa, mudar o texto, colocar uma classe)
})
I’m trying with this, but it’s not rolling. It’s calling Document and not this element:
$("#b").ready(function() {
this.text("teste");
})
I’m wearing the right one?
I’m making the call "$("#a"). ready(.." right?
I’m making a mistake somewhere?
If it was to attack it after q the page was loaded just change the ready to load equal $(document). ready and (window). load?
Help me with
Can you explain what you mean by
atacar? Also explain what you want to do with this text so we can help better.– Sergio
tried with
$(this)instead ofthis?– BrTkCa
It seems to me that attacking means manipulating.
– Pagotti
In which country is this expression used
atacar?– gpupo