My problem is probably rather simple, but I’m not at that skill level yet. I’d like to apply a text-scrambling effect with jQuery on my H3’s in my WordPress sidebar. I found the H3 tags here (before_title and after_title):
register_sidebar( array(
'name' => __( 'Main Sidebar', 'twentyeleven' ),
'id' => 'sidebar-1',
'before_widget' => '<aside id="%1$s" class="widget %2$s">',
'after_widget' => "</aside>",
'before_title' => '<h3 class="widget-title" >',
'after_title' => '</h3>',
) );
I tried adding onmouseover='$("#unscramble").unscramble(); return false;'
in the opening h3 tag, but it broke my page, unsurprisingly. I’m not sure how I’d go about applying this effect anyway. The way it’s arranged now, I suppose mousing over one trigger will trigger all h3s on the page, whereas I only want to trigger the current h3 I’m mousing over. I’m trying to use the ‘unscramble’ effect which can be found here at https://github.com/jaz303/jquery-grab-bag
Any help greatly appreciated 🙂
You have to make sure you are applying the ID (
unscramble
) that you are selecting in your jQuery (the$('#unscramble')
-part) to yourh3
s (although this would not work with more than oneh3
so forget about this) OR select the element that triggers the function via$(this)
(this is strongly preferred as you can use it with as many elements as you like).Would read:
onmouseover='$(this).unscramble();'
You can skip the
return false;
btw as this is not a link or something else with default mouseover behavior (at least that’s what I think).See those examples: http://jsfiddle.net/uZvYw/1/ and http://jsfiddle.net/uZvYw
Edit: As others have stated I too would think it would be a little better to generate this behavior in a seperate
<script>
, but that’s just a side noteTry binding it elsewhere:
even though putting HTML or javascript code in PHP is not a good practice.
but did you escape the single quotes in mouseover?
like: