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I'm trying to learn jQurey's ajax functions. I've got it working, but jQuery doesn't find elements in the returned HTML DOM. In the same folder as jquery, run this page:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head>
	<title>runthis</title>

	<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript" src="jquery-1.3.2.min.js"></script>

	<script tyle="text/javascript">
	$(document).ready(function(){
		$('input').click(function(){
			$.ajax({
				type : "GET",
				url : 'ajaxtest-load.html',
				dataType : "html",
				success: function(data) {

				alert( data ); // shows whole dom

				alert( $(data).find('#wrapper').html() ); // returns null

				},
				error : function() {
					alert("Sorry, The requested property could not be found.");
				}
			});
		});
	});
	</script

</head>
<body>
	<input type="button" value="load" />
</body>
</html>

Which loads this page "ajaxtest-load.html":

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head>
	<title>load this</title>

</head>
<body>
	<div id="wrapper">
	test
	</div>
</body>
</html>

It gives two alerts. One showing the DOM was loaded, but the second shows NULL instead of the #wrapper. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: I'm loading "ajaxtest-load.html" which includes the whole header, including jquery again. Is that the issue?

Thanks!

flag
Perhaps clean up the top code and post what the html looks like on 'ajaxtest-load.html' – ScottE Jun 23 at 15:55
The second html block is ajaxtest-load.html. Edited the description. Sorry about that. – threebttn Jun 23 at 16:27

3 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

I've managed to load snippets off of full html-documents just fine by using .load().

To create a new block with extracted html into the DOM I do this:

$('<div></div>').appendTo('body').load('some-other-document.html div#contents');

If it's not working for you, make sure you're using the most recent version (or post 1.2) of jQuery. See the documentation for .load for more examples.

Edit:

Note, though, that with the above example the result will be:

<div><div id="contents">...</div></div>

To get just the contents of the #contents div in the other document, use a callback-function in the load-function call.

$('<div></div>').load('some-other-document.html div#contents', null, 
    function (responseText, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest) {
        if (textStatus == success) {
            $('<div></div>').appendTo('body').html($(this).html());
        }
    }
);
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vote up 0 vote down

I found that if ajaxtest-load.html does not have <html> or <body> tags but just a few html elements, it does work.

Edit:

If the input has to be a full HTML page, maybe you can first strip of the tags you don't want with string operations.. anyone?

Edit 2:

Vaguely remembered Javascript/DOM allowed for "temporary documents" which you could operate on and use the results from, then a bit of googling yielded a parseHTML function (http://www.daniweb.com/forums/post874892-2.html) which I've adapted to return the right bit:

$(document).ready(function(){
  $('input').click(function(){
    $.ajax({
      type : "POST",
      url : 'ajaxtest-load.html',
      dataType : "html",
      success: function(data) {
        alert( data ); // shows whole dom
        var gotcha = parseHTML(data, 'wrapper');
        if (gotcha) {
          alert($(gotcha).html());
        }else{
          alert('ID not found.');
        }
      },
      error : function() {
        alert("Sorry, The requested property could not be found.");
      }
    });
  });
});

function parseHTML(html, idStr) {
  var root = document.createElement("div");
  root.innerHTML = html;
  // Get all child nodes of root div
  var allChilds = root.childNodes;
  for (var i = 0; i < allChilds.length; i++) {
    if (allChilds[i].id && allChilds[i].id == idStr) {
      return allChilds[i];
    }
  }
  return false;
}

Does that work?

link|flag
Oh, maybe a regex to strip out the body or something? And then use jQuery to convert that to an object that I can .find() on? – threebttn Jun 23 at 16:49
Something like that, yes. I'd have supplied an example but my JS regex isn't that fantastic, and I'm double wary of giving regex examples when I've very little idea what might be in the content :-) (Like, the body could have attributes containing a '>') But willing to try.. – MSpreij Jun 23 at 17:06
vote up 0 vote down

Why not try this and see what happens:

$('#testDiv').load('ajaxtest-load.html #wrapper', function(resp) {
    alert(resp);
});

From the $.load documentation:

In jQuery 1.2 you can now specify a jQuery selector in the URL. Doing so will filter the incoming HTML document, only injecting the elements that match the selector.

link|flag
Thanks, but running that, firebug showed the error '$.load' is not a function. – threebttn Jun 23 at 16:31
You can't just use $.load. You have to use it on a selector like $(selector).load() – T B Jun 23 at 16:33
@T B - yeah, don't know what I was thinking. @threebttn Sorry about that, try using it to fill up a div. See my edit. – karim79 Jun 23 at 16:36
I modified it to populate a div, but still no luck. I think it's because it's a full HTML DOM instead of an HTML snippet (per the answer below, too). Could that be the problem? How do I parse a full HTML DOM? – threebttn Jun 23 at 16:45
Uhm, not sure from which activities one gets alerts here (new to SO) so I'll just comment the main question.. I updated my post below a bit with a parseHTML function, hope that helps – MSpreij Jun 23 at 17:40

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