The example in this article describes how jQuery implements the tab effect. Share it with everyone for your reference. The details are as follows:
var tabs = { init: function(){ var $tab_contents=$('.tab-contents'), $tab_nav=$('.tab-nav'); $tab_contents.find('.tab-content:not(:first)').hide(); $tab_nav.find('li:first').addClass('active'); $tab_nav.on('click', 'li a', function(e){ e.preventDefault(); var $this=$(this),activeTab=this.hash,parent=$this.parents('section'),$contents=$(parent,$tab_contents); $(parent,$tab_nav).find('li').removeClass('active'); $this.parent().addClass('active'); $contents.find('.tab-content').hide(); $contents.find(activeTab).fadeIn(250); }); } }; $(document).ready(tabs.init());
The html part is as follows:
<section> <h2>Section Title</h2> <ul class="tab-nav"> <li><a href="#tab1" title="">Tab 1</a></li> <li><a href="#tab2" title="">Tab 2</a></li> </ul> <div class="tab-contents"> <div id="tab1" class="tab-content"><!-- Tab 1 content here --></div> <div id="tab2" class="tab-content"><!-- Tab 2 content here --></div> </div> </section>
I hope this article will be helpful to everyone’s jquery programming design.