//dom
<div id='toBeCloned'><span>Some name</span></div>
<div id='targetElm'></div>
//js
$(function () {
//creating a clone
var _clone = $('#toBeCloned').clone(true);
// target element
var _target = $('#targetElm');
//now target element is to be filled with cloned element with data of span changed
var _someData = [1, 2, 3, 4];
//loop through data
$.each(_someData, function (i, data) {
var _newElm = {};
$.extend(_newElm, _clone);//copy cloned to new Elm
_newElm.find('span').html(data); //edit content of span
alert('p'); // alert added to show that append in next line inspite of adding new element to dom just updating the previous one
_target.append(_newElm);//update target
});
});
expected Result:
1 2 3 4
resut iam getting is
4
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i just created another question to simplify my question stackoverflow.com/questions/2452397/…– Praveen PrasadMar 16, 2010 at 6:03
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1 Answer
You just want to clone the element on each iteration. A DOM object is not a normal JS object (Well it is, but it has more to it which is why you have to use createElement
in raw JS to create a new one):
$(function () {
// element to be cloned
var _clone_me = $('#toBeCloned');
// target element
var _target = $('#targetElm');
//now target element is to be filled with cloned element with data of span changed
var _someData = [1, 2, 3, 4];
//loop through data
$.each(_someData, function (i, data) {
var _newElm = _clone_me.clone(true); // clone copy
_newElm.find('span').html(data); //edit content of span
_target.append(_newElm); //update target
});
});
Why your code failed, is though you were "extending" an empty object on each iteration, it was still always referring to the same DOM node. You kept changing its value, and appending it to #target
. Additionally, the way append
works actually moves the object, so you weren't getting duplicate objects.
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i just created another question to simplify my question stackoverflow.com/questions/2452397/… although your solution is somewhere near my requirement Mar 16, 2010 at 6:02