1. The commonly used filter selectors in Jquery are as follows:
1. :first, selects the first element, such as $("div:first") selects the first div element
2. :last, selects the last element, such as $("div:last") selects the last div element
3. :not (selector), selects elements that do not meet the "selector" condition, For example, $("div:not(.className)"), selects all div elements whose style is not className
4. :even/:odd, selects elements with even/odd indexes, such as $("div :even"), select all div elements with even index numbers
5, :eq (index number)/:gt (index number)/:lt (index number), select equal to the index number/greater than the index Elements with number/less than index number, such as $("div:lt(3)"), select all div elements with index number less than 3
Note: Mixed use of
filter selectors Remember that the subsequent filtering conditions are based on the re-numbering after filtering by the previous filtering selector, that is, the filtering is step-by-step, such as
$("#t1 tr:gt(0):lt (3)").css("fontSize", "28"); //lt(3) is the serial number in the new sequence from gt(0), do not write it as lt(4)
Second, focus
Multi-condition selector
Multi-condition selector: $("p,div,span,menuitem"), select the p tag at the same time, div tags, and span tag elements with menuitem style
Note that there cannot be more or less spaces in the selector expression, which is easy to make mistakes!
Relative selector
As long as you specify the second parameter in $(), the second parameter is a relative element. For example, the html code is as follows:
dsds | dsfdef | dsfdef | tr>