I was reading jQuery's page for animate()
http://api.jquery.com/animate/
Its examples don't mention about if using
<a href="#" id="clickme">click me</a>
...
$('#clickme').click(function() {
$('#someDiv').animate({left: "+=60"});
})
we actually still have to return false like in the old days?
$('#clickme').click(function() {
开发者_C百科 $('#someDiv').animate({left: "+=60"});
return false;
})
(but then, those examples didn't use a <a>
for the "click me"... but used something else.
Otherwise the page will jump back to the beginning of the page? Does jQuery have a more elegant or magical way of doing it?
You need to use event.preventDefault():
$('...').click(function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
// Code.
});
From the jQuery Website:
event.preventDefault()
Description: If this method is called, the default action of the event will not be triggered.
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