I have an jQuery object with 3 members:
var elements = $(\"#\" + this.wrapperName + \">ul>li>a>img\");
Object { 0:
, 1:
, 2
The problem is that element is a DOM node, without access to jQuery methods, what you need to use is $(this) or $(element):
elements.each(function(index, element) {
$(this).css({
"width": elemWidth,
"height": elemHeight,
"top": elemTop,
"left": elemLeft
});
}
Or:
elements.each(function(index, element) {
$(element).css({
"width": elemWidth,
"height": elemHeight,
"top": elemTop,
"left": elemLeft
});
}
Or you could, instead, use cssText (if you really want to work with DOM nodes):
elements.each(function(index, element) {
element.style.cssText = 'width: ' + elemWidth + '; height: ' + elemHeight + ' top: ' + elemTop + '; left: ' + elemLeft;
}
Bear in mind that, within each(function (index, element){ ... }); element is exactly the same as this (and, as a corollary, $(this) is the same as $(element)). I'm not sure quite what the benefit is, of using the element at all.