Book Image

MooTools 1.3 Cookbook

By : Jay L Johnston
Book Image

MooTools 1.3 Cookbook

By: Jay L Johnston

Overview of this book

MooTools is a JavaScript framework that abstracts the JavaScript language. JavaScript itself, complex in syntax, provides the tools to write a layer of content interaction for each different browser. MooTools abstracts those individual, browser-specific layers to allow cross-browser scripting in an easy-to-read and easy-to-remember syntax. Animation and interaction, once the domain of Flash, are being taken by storm by the MooTools JavaScript framework, which can cause size, shape, color, and opacity to transition smoothly. Discover how to use AJAX to bring data to today's web page users who demand interactivity without clunky page refreshes. When searching for animation and interactivity solutions that work, MooTools 1.3 Cookbook has individual, reusable code examples that get you running fast! MooTools 1.3 Cookbook readies programmers to animate, perform AJAX, and attach event listeners in a simple format where each section provides a clear and cross-browser compatible sketch of how to solve a problem, whether reading from beginning to finish or browsing directly to a particular recipe solution. MooTools 1.3 Cookbook provides instant solutions to MooTools problems – whatever you want to do with MooTools, this book will tell you how to do it. MooTools 1.3 Cookbook is presented in a progressive order that builds concepts and ideas, while simultaneously being a collection of powerful individual, standalone, recipe solutions.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
MooTools 1.3 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Removing an element by ID


Ready to give an element the axe? Send it to "File 13" by removing it from the page.

Getting ready

There are only four things that can be done with data. It can be Created, Read, Updated, and Deleted: CRUD. It was once thought that the alternative to this was to Create, Read, Alter, and Purge data, but we then realized that this alternative idea was CRAP.

Be prepared for two examples in one. The first shows a novice approach to handling actions in JavaScript. Then the second shows an industry best-practice approach, one that is less intrusive into the DOM.

How to do it...

In this exercise, we delete, or purge an element from the HTML DOM by use of the destroy() method.

<script type="text/javascript" src="mootools-1.3.0.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p id="s1">The Fox jumped over the lazy dog.
<a href="#"
onclick="javascript:delete_by_id('s1');">
<small>DELETE THIS CRUD</small></a>
</p>
<p id="s2">Jack...