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jQuery Mobile Navigation Tabs

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-23 21:04 出处:网络
I want to have a tab-navigation in my jQuery Mobile project. I know I can use the data-role \'navbar\'开发者_StackOverflow中文版 but I only want to change the content below that navbar without swiping

I want to have a tab-navigation in my jQuery Mobile project. I know I can use the data-role 'navbar'开发者_StackOverflow中文版 but I only want to change the content below that navbar without swiping to a new page. So far I could only have several different pages with the same navbar linking to each other but that's not what I want.

Can anyone help me?

Thank you in advance


You can use the jQuery Mobile navbar styling but use your own click-handler so instead of changing pages the click will just hide/show the proper content on the same page.

HTML

<div data-role="navbar">
    <ul>
        <li><a href="#" data-href="a">One</a></li>
        <li><a href="#" data-href="b">Two</a></li>
    </ul>
</div><!-- /navbar -->
<div class="content_div">onLoad Content</div>
<div id="a" class="content_div">Some 'A' Content</div>
<div id="b" class="content_div">Some 'B' Content</div>

JAVASCRIPT

$(document).delegate('[data-role="navbar"] a', 'click', function () {
    $(this).addClass('ui-btn-active');
    $('.content_div').hide();
    $('#' + $(this).attr('data-href')).show();
    return false;//stop default behavior of link
});

CSS

.content_div {
    display: none;
}
.content_div:first-child {
    display: block;
}

Here is a jsfiddle of the above code: http://jsfiddle.net/3RJuX/

NOTE:

  • Each of the links in the navbar have a "data-href" attribute set to the id of the div (or whatever container you want to use) that will be displayed.

Update

After 1 year I came back to this answer and noticed that the delegated event handler selector can be optimized a bit to utilize a class rather than an attribute (which is a lot faster of a lookup):

$(document).delegate('.ui-navbar a', 'click', function () {
    $(this).addClass('ui-btn-active');
    $('.content_div').hide();
    $('#' + $(this).attr('data-href')).show();
});

Update

This code can be made to be more modular by using relative selectors rather than absolute ones (like $('.content_div'), as this will select all matching elements in the DOM rather than just ones relative to the button clicked).

//same selector here
$(document).delegate('.ui-navbar ul li > a', 'click', function () {

    //un-highlight and highlight only the buttons in the same navbar widget
    $(this).closest('.ui-navbar').find('a').removeClass('ui-navbar-btn-active');

    //this bit is the same, you could chain it off of the last call by using two `.end()`s
    $(this).addClass('ui-navbar-btn-active');

    //this starts the same but then only selects the sibling `.content_div` elements to hide rather than all in the DOM
    $('#' + $(this).attr('data-href')).show().siblings('.content_div').hide();
});​

This allows you to nest tabs and/or have multiple sets of tabs on a pages or pseudo-pages.

Some documentation for the "relative selectors" used:

  • .closest() : http://api.jquery.com/closest
  • .siblings() : http://api.jquery.com/siblings

Here was an example: http://jsfiddle.net/Cfbjv/25/ (It's offline now)


UPDATE: Check out my jsfiddle at http://jsfiddle.net/ryanhaney/eLENj/

I just spent some time figuring this out, so I thought I would answer this. Note I am using multi-page single file, YMMV.

<div data-role="footer" data-position="fixed">
    <div data-role="navbar">
        <ul>
            <li><a href="#page-1" data-role="tab" data-icon="grid">Page 1</a></li>
            <li><a href="#page-2" data-role="tab" data-icon="grid">Page 2</a></li>
            <li><a href="#page-3" data-role="tab" data-icon="grid">Page 3</a></li>
        </ul>
    </div>
</div>

$("div[data-role=page]").bind("pagebeforeshow", function () {
    // prevents a jumping "fixed" navbar
    $.mobile.silentScroll(0);
});

$("a[data-role=tab]").each(function () {
        // bind to click of each anchor
        var anchor = $(this);
        anchor.bind("click", function () {
            // change the page, optionally with transitions
            // but DON'T navigate...
            $.mobile.changePage(anchor.attr("href"), {
                transition: "none",
                changeHash: false
        });

        // cancel the click event
        return false;
    });
});


@Mike Bartlett

I struggled with this myself but after breaking Jasper's code down it looks like there is a slight nuance from his posted code and that on the jsfiddle page.

Where he has posted

$(document).delegate('[data-role="navbar"] a', 'click', function () {
$(this).addClass('ui-btn-active');
$('.content_div').hide();
$('#' + $(this).attr('data-href')).show(); });

I found it useful to change the last line to simply call whatever content you set the "data-href" value to be in your navbar.

$('div[data-role="navbar"] a').live('click', function () {
    $(this).addClass('ui-btn-active');
    $('div.content_div').hide();
    $($(this).attr('data-href')).show();
  });

my navbar html then reads

<div data-role="navbar">
<ul>
    <li><a href="#" data-href="#a">One</a></li>
    <li><a href="#" data-href="#b">Two</a></li>
</ul>

Which is pretty much the same as his but for some reason I got no "error loading page" message. Hope that helps...


Please refers this below link for all kind of nav bar in jquery

http://jquerymobile.com/demos/1.0rc2/docs/toolbars/docs-navbar.html

<div data-role="navbar">
   <ul>
    <li><a href="a.html" class="ui-btn-active">One</a></li>
    <li><a href="b.html">Two</a></li>
   </ul>
</div>

thanks


I noticed that the question was asked four years ago, so i'm not sure whether the Tab widget were available with JQ Mobile at that time. anyway i'm a guy from 2015

the awesome solution that i use as below with Jquery Mobile 1.4.5

<div data-role="tabs" id="tabs">
  <div data-role="navbar">
    <ul>
      <li><a href="#one" data-ajax="false">one</a></li>
      <li><a href="#two" data-ajax="false">two</a></li>
      <li><a href="ajax-content-ignore.html" data-ajax="false">three</a></li>
    </ul>
  </div>
  <div id="one" class="ui-body-d ui-content">
    <h1>First tab contents</h1>
  </div>
  <div id="two">
    <ul data-role="listview" data-inset="true">
        <li><a href="#">Acura</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">Audi</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">BMW</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">Cadillac</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">Ferrari</a></li>
    </ul>
  </div>
</div>


I liked @Ryan-Haney's answer, but thought I'd add my own rough draft in, if anyone can find a more efficient way of doing this, then please add a comment.. thanks

I did it this way because I have a bunch of "include" files that get loaded into the DOM at runtime, so I couldn't hard-code that the n-th tab is highlighted/active for each page like Ryan could. I also do have the luxury of having only a single tabbar in my app.

$(document).delegate('.ui-navbar a', 'tap', function ()
{
  $('.ui-navbar').find('li').find('a').removeClass('ui-btn-active');
  $('.ui-navbar').find('li:nth-child(' + ($(this).parent().index() + 1) + ')').find('a').addClass('ui-btn-active');
});
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