jQuery has two methods called .toggle()
. The other one [docs] does exactly what you want for click events.
Note: It seems that at least since jQuery 1.7, this version of .toggle
is deprecated, probably for exactly that reason, namely that two versions exist. Using .toggle
to change the visibility of elements is just a more common usage. The method was removed in jQuery 1.9.
Below is an example of how one could implement the same functionality as a plugin (but probably exposes the same problems as the built-in version (see the last paragraph in the documentation)).
(function($) {
$.fn.clickToggle = function(func1, func2) {
var funcs = [func1, func2];
this.data('toggleclicked', 0);
this.click(function() {
var data = $(this).data();
var tc = data.toggleclicked;
$.proxy(funcs[tc], this)();
data.toggleclicked = (tc + 1) % 2;
});
return this;
};
}(jQuery));
DEMO
(Disclaimer: I don't say this is the best implementation! I bet it can be improved in terms of performance)
And then call it with:
$('#test').clickToggle(function() {
$(this).animate({
width: "260px"
}, 1500);
},
function() {
$(this).animate({
width: "30px"
}, 1500);
});
Update 2:
In the meantime, I created a proper plugin for this. It accepts an arbitrary number of functions and can be used for any event. It can be found on GitHub.
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