Take a look at this fiddle, I think it is doing what you are looking for. The fundamental difference is that you want to call animate on the set, rather than this
. It appears that when you add a handler to a set, this
refers to the individual elements in the set (which are iterated over to assign the handler), and not the set itself.
Note that I pulled the handler functions out into the getHoverHandler function:
function getHoverHandler(fillColor) {
var cSet = set;
return function(){
cSet.animate({fill: fillColor}, 300);
};
}
set.hover(getHoverHandler('#000'),
getHoverHandler('#FFF'));
in order to break the closure. If you try to do it like this:
set.hover(function(){
set.animate({fill: '#000'}, 300)
}, function(){
set.animate({fill: '#FFF'}, 300)
});
as you loop through, set will keep changing, and the closures will maintain awareness of this. As a result, all handlers will be acting on the last row of boxes.
If you don't understand javascript closures, you might want to look at this article. It is old, but in pretty simple language, and it helped me as I have tried to get my head around them.
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