Contents:
.get( index )Returns: Element
Description: Retrieve one of the elements matched by the jQuery object.
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version added: 1.0.get( index )
- indexType: IntegerA zero-based integer indicating which element to retrieve.
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The .get()
method grants access to the DOM nodes underlying each jQuery object. If the value of index
is out of bounds — less than the negative number of elements or equal to or greater than the number of elements — it returns undefined
. Consider a simple unordered list:
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With an index specified, .get( index )
retrieves a single element:
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Since the index is zero-based, the first list item is returned:
<li id="foo">
Each jQuery object also masquerades as an array, so we can use the array dereferencing operator to get at the list item instead:
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However, this syntax lacks some of the additional capabilities of .get(), such as specifying a negative index:
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A negative index is counted from the end of the matched set, so this example returns the last item in the list:
<li id="bar">
Example:
Display the tag name of the click element.
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Demo:
.get()Returns: Array
Description: Retrieve the elements matched by the jQuery object.
Consider a simple unordered list:
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Without a parameter, .get()
returns an array of all of the elements:
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All of the matched DOM nodes are returned by this call, contained in a standard array:
[<li id="foo">, <li id="bar">]
Example:
Select all divs in the document and return the DOM Elements as an Array; then use the built-in reverse() method to reverse that array.
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