1

When I select an element by name in Javascript, I usually use this code:

document.GetElementsByName('pencil')[0]

This way, it gets the first element by the name "pencil" and, if I want to get the second, third, etc. I just change the zero with one, and so on.

Now I am trying to do this in jQuery, by using this selector:

$('div[name|="pencil"]')

obviously this will be an array of divs named "pencil".

How can I make it refer to a particular name as I do with plain javascript? Thank you.


I am trying to get its innerHTML by using this code:

alert( $('div[name|="ball"]').html()
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  • 2
    or $('div[name|="pencil"]').get(0); ?
    – Melvin
    Jun 26, 2012 at 8:35
  • It doesn't seem to work. Please check my edit as well. Jun 26, 2012 at 8:46

2 Answers 2

4

I would use the .eq() method and do it this way:

$('div[name="pencil"]').eq(0)

I think it reads a little easier.

I'm not sure why you're using the pipe. That would select divs with name="pencil" or name="pencil-".

Future readers: You shouldn’t be giving div elements name attributes anyway; form elements are normally given names, and they should be unique.

3
$('div[name|="pencil"]')[0]

or

$('div[name|="pencil"]:first')

or

$('div[name|="pencil"]:eq(0)')
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  • You still need [0] or .get(0) with examples 2 and 3.
    – Salman A
    Jun 26, 2012 at 8:38
  • The 2nd and 3rd example will return a jQuery object, an array of elements (the array will contain one element). example 2/3 are not the same as your first example.
    – Salman A
    Jun 26, 2012 at 8:41
  • I only know one thing that this will select the first element with name|='pencil'
    – user1432124
    Jun 26, 2012 at 8:44

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