You're right! Sorry, I found the problem here :) Thanks.
On Aug 21, 12:47 am, Charlie Griefer <charlie.grie...@gmail.com> wrote: > I'm fairly sure that, while on index.html, <a > href="index.html">Frontpage</a> isn't "active". At least, not as far as the > :active pseudo-class goes. > > a:active refers to the a element that is actively receiving a click event. > > If you were to do: > > <div id="menu"> > <a href="index.cfm" class="active">Frontpage</a> > <a href="contact.html">Contact</a> > </div> > > ... then you could do $('#menu a.active') > > > > On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 3:41 PM, Dennis Madsen <den...@demaweb.dk> wrote: > > > No, not really! Say I'm on the page index.html, where I have this > > HTML: > > > <div id="menu"> > > <a href="index.html">Frontpage</a> > > <a href="contact.html">Contact</a> > > </div> > > > Since I'm on the index.html-page, the first a-tag is "active" in CSS. > > I would like jQuery to give my the active a-tag in my menu-div. > > > Hope you understand my problem now. > > > On Aug 21, 12:33 am, Charlie Griefer <charlie.grie...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > an "active" link is one that has received a click. > > > > so you can do: > > > > $('a').click(function() { > > > $(this).doSomethingHere // 'this' is a reference to the element > > that > > > triggered the click > > > > }); > > > > does that help? > > > > On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 3:30 PM, Dennis Madsen <den...@demaweb.dk> > > wrote: > > > > > I've this CSS to style my links in my menu: > > > > .menu a:link, .menu a:active, .menu a:visited{ > > > > color: #ffffff; > > > > text-decoration: none; > > > > } > > > > > I would like to find the a-tag (<a>) which is active. I've tried > > > > something like: $('.menu a:active'). > > > > > How can I find that element? > > > > -- > > > I have failed as much as I have succeeded. But I love my life. I love my > > > wife. And I wish you my kind of success. > > -- > I have failed as much as I have succeeded. But I love my life. I love my > wife. And I wish you my kind of success.