I'm building a web application (using prototype) that requires the addition of large chunks of HTML into the DOM. Most of these are rows that contain elements with all manner of attributes.
Currently I keep a blank row of HTML in a variable and
var blankRow = '<tr><td>'
+'<a href="{LINK}" onclick="someFunc(\'{STRING}\');">{WORD}</a>'
+'</td></tr>';
function insertRow(o) {
newRow = blankRow
.sub('{LINK}',o.link)
.sub('{STRING}',o.string)
.sub('{WORD}',o.word);
$('tbodyElem').insert( newRow );
}
Now that works all well and dandy, but is it the best practice?
I have to update the code in the blankRow when I update code on the page, so the new elements being inserted are the same. It gets sucky when I have like 40 lines of HTML to go in a blankRow and then I have to escape it too.
Is there an easier way? I was thinking of urlencoding and then decoding it before insertion but that would still mean a blankRow and lots of escaping.
What would be mean would be a eof function a la PHP et al.
$blankRow = <<<EOF
text
text
EOF;
That would mean no escaping but it would still need a blankRow.
What do you do in this situation?
SOLVED
Ended up using a DOMBuilder in prototype. No other libraries were needed:
$w('a div p span img table thead td th tr tbody tfoot input').each(function(e) {
window['$' + e] = function() {
return new Element(e, arguments[0]);
}
});
newPart = $div({id: 'partition-4'})
.insert( $p()
.insert('<b>Stuff</b>')
)
.insert( $p({
id: 'a-p'})
.insert('<b>More stuff</b>')
);
$('parentDiv').insert(newPart);