// Splintered striper 1.3// reworking of Zebra Tables and similar methods which works not only for tables and even/odd rows,// but as a general DOM means of assigning any number of classes to children of a parent element.// Patrick H. Lauke aka redux / www.splintered.co.uk// Distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license - http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0//* * Summary:      Core experiment function that applies any number of classes to all child elements *               contained in all occurences of a parent element (either with or without a specific class) * Parameters:   parentElementTag - parent tag name *               parentElementClass - class assigned to the parent; if null, all parentElementTag elements will be affected *               childElementTag -  tag name of the child elements to apply the styles to *               styleClasses - comma separated list of any number of style classes (using 2 classes gives the classic "zebra" effect) * Return:       none */function striper(parentElementTag, parentElementClass, childElementTag, styleClasses){	var i=0,currentParent,currentChild;	// capability and sanity check	if ((document.getElementsByTagName)&&(parentElementTag)&&(childElementTag)&&(styleClasses)) {		// turn the comma separate list of classes into an array		var styles = styleClasses.split(',');		// get an array of all parent tags		var parentItems = document.getElementsByTagName(parentElementTag);		// loop through all parent elements		while (currentParent = parentItems[i++]) {			// if parentElementClass was null, or if the current parent's class matches the specified class			if ((parentElementClass == null)||(currentParent.className == parentElementClass)) {				var j=0,k=0;				// get all child elements in the current parent element				var childItems = currentParent.getElementsByTagName(childElementTag);				// loop through all child elements				while (currentChild = childItems[j++]) {					// based on the current element and the number of styles in the array, work out which class to apply					k = (j+(styles.length-1)) % styles.length;					// add the class to the child element - if any other classes were already present, they're kept intact					currentChild.className = currentChild.className+" "+styles[k];				}			}		}	}}


 window.onload = function() {striper('ul','items','li','odd,even');}