2

The following works in Firefox, but breaks in IE7 & 8:

$("#my-first-div, #my-second-div").hide();

so I have to do this:

$("#my-first-div").hide();
$("#my-second-div").hide();

Is this normal?

EDIT: ok, my actual real-life code is this:

$("#charges-gsm,#charges-gsm-faq,#charges-gsm-prices").html(html);

and my error is this

( IE8): Message: 'nodeName' is null or not an object
  Line: 19 Char: 150 Code: 0
  URI: http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.6/jquery.min.js 
1
  • this works for me, on both IE7 and Firefox
    – Nico
    Oct 9, 2008 at 12:08

5 Answers 5

2

The location you specify states:

Message: 'nodeName' is null or not an object
    Line: 19 Char: 150 Code: 0
    URI: http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.6/jquery.min.js

That particular piece of jquery is:

nodeName:function(elem,name){
    return elem.nodeName&&elem.nodeName.toUpperCase()==name.toUpperCase();
}

which is itself a closure created for the call to jQuery.extend(). So I would like to ask, if you do a "View source" or its IE equivalent, are there any other occurrences of the string "nodeName" that could be interfering with the jQuery one.

Can you also test the following by creating an xx.html file and opeing it in IE7/8? It works fine under Firefox 3 in Ubuntu, with or without the spaces following the commas in the selector.

<html>
  <head>
  <script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.6/jquery.min.js"></script>
  <script type="text/javascript">
    $(document).ready(function(){
      $("a").click(function(event){
        $("#charges-gsm,#charges-gsm-faq,#charges-gsm-prices").html("xx")
        event.preventDefault();
      });
    });
  </script>
  </head>
  <body>
    <a href="http://jquery.com/">jQuery</a>
    <hr>
    <div id="charges-gsm">CHARGES-GSM</div>
    <div id="charges-gsm-faq">CHARGES-GSM-FAQ</div>
    <div id="charges-gsm-prices">CHARGES-GSM-PRICES</div>
  </body>
</html>
2
  • Thanks for this Pax. Your example works fine. I'll do some debugging and let you know what my problem is. At least I now know its my fault ;) Many thanks! Oct 9, 2008 at 13:33
  • It's never the developers fault :-), more likely a rogue interaction between jQuery and some other AJAXian thing (like Google APIs). That's why I used the example to narrow it down to either jQuery or not-jQuery.
    – paxdiablo
    Oct 9, 2008 at 14:18
1

Hmm, I can't seem to duplicate the problem in IE7 (both forms work fine for me). How does it break? Does it not hide either, or does it only hide the first one?

1
0

Have you tried it without a space after the comma? The examples given in the specification have no space.

0

Should work, according to the documentation. There's an outside chance you need to remove the trailing space character after the comma.

0

By chance, is one of your elements nested inside the other?

ie:

<div id="foo">
  <div id="bar"> 
    <div id="baz">
  </div>
</div>

If so, you may be experiencing a pointer problem, where IE may have freed bar prior to you trying to work out that its a div. The behaviour of

$("#foo,#bar,#baz").html("xx"); 

In this secenario is:

  1. Replace #foo with xx
  2. Replace #bar with xx
  3. Replace #baz with xx

However, if at phases 2 & 3, #bar and #baz no longer exist, you are going to have a little fun. ( it doesn't matter if xx happens to contain a copy of #bar and #baz, they'll likely be different objects, and the initial objects that you're replacing have already been captured, just are no longer in the DOM :/ )

You can possibly suppress ( yes, gah, awful idea ) this error by encapsulating the procedure in a try/catch

try { 
  $("#foo,#bar,#baz").html("xx"); 
}
catch( e ) 
{
   /* DO NOTHING D: */ 
}

But this is your last resort, right after getting some sort of JS debugger binding IE and tracing the error to its core.

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