I'd like to structure my JQuery to fade in each individual item at a time. Here's an example of the behavior, and here's the JQuery I have so far:
$开发者_JS百科('li').css('display', 'none') .delay(1000).fadeIn(800)
This probably not the best solution but it should work:
$('li').each(function(i){
var el = this;
setTimeout(function(){
$(el).fadeIn(800);
},800*i)
});
Just for fun, a recursive version:
function animateLi(i){
$('li').eq(i).fadeIn(800);
if ($('li').eq(i+1).length>0)
{
setTimeout(function(){animateLi(i+1)},800);
}
}
animateLi(0);
Maybe something like this:
var delay = 500, t = 0;
$("li").css('display', 'none').each(function(){
t += delay;
var $li = $(this);
setTimeout(function(){
$li.fadeIn();
},t);
});
Loop through the li, and use setTimeout to queue the animation for that li.
$('li').each(function () {
var li = this;
animateLi = function () {
li.fadeIn(800);
}
setTimeout(animateLi, timeout);
timeout += 100;
});
A slight variation on Ivans method
$(function() {
$('ul li:hidden').each(function(idx) {
setTimeout(function(el) {
el.fadeIn();
}, idx* 1000, $(this));
});
});
And a recursive function using fadeIn callback function instead of setTimeout
function DisplayOneByOne(){
$('ul li:hidden:first').fadeIn('2000', DisplayOneByOne);
}
Here is how you do it:
var delay = 200, t = 0;
$("li").css('display', 'none').each(function(){
t += delay;
var $li = $(this);
setTimeout(function(){
$li.fadeIn(1900);
},t);
});
There is another way to fade in elements after each other:
$.fn.fadeInNext = function(delay) {
return $(this).fadeIn(delay,function() {
$(this).next().fadeInNext();
});
};
$('li').hide().first().fadeInNext(1000);
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