Inside this object, I have a property Response.action
that is meant to be a shorthand for triggering code on jQuery's .ready
and .resize
simultaneously. The comment in the code block below demonstrates its usage. Response.action
works on .ready
but not on .resize
. Can anyone see why and/or suggest how to make it work for both?
window.Response = (function($, window, undefined) {
var Response = {}, // object
$window = $(window),
$document = $(document); // cache selectors
/*
Response.action()
This triggers code on .ready *and* .resize
usage:
Response.action( myactions );
function myactions() {
// do stuff
}
*/
action = function( code ) {
var code = ( code !== undefined ) ? wrap() : false; // apply wrap() if we have code
function wrap() {
$document.ready(function() {
$window.resize(function() {
code // input
}).resize(); // trigger resize handlers
}); // close .ready function
}
return code; // wrapped code fires on .ready and .resize
},
Response.action = action;
return Response; // return object
})(jQuery, window); // expose to global object
This is for responsejs.com - the full lib (in progress) is there.
I'm using one of the other properties to test it. The .band
property is solid on its own:
Response.action( myactions() );
function myactions() {
if ( Response.band(600) ) { $('header').html('600px or wider'); }
else { $('header').html('below 600px'); }
}
Update: this works:
Response.action = 开发者_StackOverflowfunction ( func ) { if ( typeof func !== 'function' ) { return false; }
$(function () {
func();
$window.resize( func );
}).resize();
return func;
};
with this usage syntax:
Response.action( myactions );
function myactions() {
// do stuff
}
*Note that in the call it needs to be myactions
as opposed to myactions()
How about
window.Response = (function ( $, window, undefined ) {
var Response = {};
Response.action = function ( func ) {
if ( typeof func !== 'function' ) { return false; }
$(function () {
func();
$( window ).resize( func );
});
return func;
};
return Response;
})( jQuery , window );
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