I have a couple of links on my page (inside a <div id="theme-selector">
) which allow you to change the CSS stylesheets:
$('#theme-selector a').click(function(){
var path = $(this).attr('href');
$('head link').remove();
$('head').append('<link type="text/css" href="'+path+'" rel="stylesheet" />');
return false;
});
Now, after I've changed the style on the page, I want to get the new background color, using the following code (which I put after the $('head').append
call):
var bgcolor = $('body').css('background-color');
alert(bgcolor);
The problem is, I think, that it takes some time for the browser to download the new stylesheet and I sometimes get the old background color in my alert message. Is there some event I can bind that will only alert me after all the stylesheets are loaded on the page?
At the moment, all I can think of is using a setTimeout(function(){}, 5000);
which isn't great, because what if it takes longer/shorter to load all the CSS on the page.
Let me know if I need to clarify anything and I can provide more code.
Rather than creating a new link element and appending it to the head, you could retrieve the contents of the stylesheet with an AJAX call, and insert it into an inline style block. That way, you can use jQuery's 'complete' callback to fire off your check.
$('#theme-selector a').click(function(){
var path = $(this).attr('href');
$.get(path, function(response){
//Check if the user theme element is in place - if not, create it.
if (!$('#userTheme').length) $('head').append('<style id="userTheme"></style>');
//populate the theme element with the new style (replace the old one if necessary)
$('#userTheme').text(response);
//Check whatever you want about the new style:
alert($('body').css('background-color'));
});
});
I haven't actually tested this code, so there may be some syntax-y errors, but the logic should be sound enough.