3
var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];
jQuery.each( positions, function(players) {
var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div');
playerNotesContent.setAttribute('id', 'player_stats_block'+this);
$("#player_stats_block" + this).append (columns); 
})

I would like to know, why the .append command doesn't work with the +this, but while creating div it works. What am I doing wrong? Sorry for my bad English and thanks a lot in advance!

UPDATED!

var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05", "06", "07", "08", "09", "10", "11", "12", "13", "14", "15", "16", "17", "18" ];

jQuery.each( positions, function(players, value) {

var player_id = $("#ctl" + value).attr("href").match(RegExp('players/([^/]+)/details.php$'))[1];
var playerlink = document.getElementById("ctl" + value);

GM_xmlhttpRequest({
method: 'GET',
url: 'http://www.test.com/players/item/' + player_id,
onload: function(responseDetails) 
{
            var page = jQuery(responseDetails.responseText);
            var columns = jQuery('div.columns',page);
            var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div');
            playerNotesContent.setAttribute('id', 'player_stats_block'+value);
            playerlink.parentNode.insertBefore( playerNotesContent, playerlink.nextSibling  );
            $('#player_stats_block00').append (columns); 
}
});
});

Like this all values gets appended in #player_stats_block00! I tried several of your answers but i cant get them appended to their correct #player_stats_blockXX. Sorry again for my bad english and thank you all for your help!

2
  • What are you trying to put with this ? if this is index or value of the array, you should use the ones provided by the callback function : $.each(positions, function(index,value) { May 4, 2012 at 13:46
  • @ThomasHaratyk: this will be a String with "00" in the first case, "01" in the second case, etc.: api.jquery.com/jQuery.each May 4, 2012 at 13:51

4 Answers 4

9

Your code is creating a div and setting its id, and then trying to look up that div by that ID. The lookup will fail, because the div hasn't been added to the DOM anywhere yet.

var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];

jQuery.each( positions, function(players) {
    // Here you're creating the div
    var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div');

    // ...and setting its `id` (btw, you can just do playerNotesContent.id = value;)
    playerNotesContent.setAttribute('id', 'player_stats_block'+this);

    // ...and here trying to look it up
    $("#player_stats_block" + this).append (columns); 
});

If you're trying to append the div to columns, you probably want this instead of your last line:

columns.append(playerNotesContent);

(Note that append adds content to the container you call it on.)

That assumes columns is a jQuery object. Otherwise:

$(playerNotesContent).appendTo(columns);

or

$(columns).append(playerNotesContent);

(Note that appendTo adds the content you call it on to the argument you give it; it's the converse of append.)

It's also worth noting that the divs being created have no content, so unless you're styling them, they won't have any dimensions and will be kinda hard to find on the page. :-)

Here's an example assuming columns is a jQuery object, and giving the divs some content so you can see them: Live copy | source

HTML:

<div id="columns"></div>

JavaScript:

jQuery(function($) {

  var columns = $("#columns");
  var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];

  jQuery.each( positions, function(players) {
    var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div');
    playerNotesContent.innerHTML = "Player Stats";
    playerNotesContent.id = 'player_stats_block'+this;
    columns.append(playerNotesContent);
  });  

});
10
  • as i see the player_stats_block00, player_stats_block01, player_stats_block02... are successfully created but append dont work! May 4, 2012 at 13:48
  • @Alex What is columns? And where is it defined?
    – Sampson
    May 4, 2012 at 13:49
  • while $('#player_stats_block').append (columns); works ok, var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div'); playerNotesContent.setAttribute('id', 'player_stats_block');playerNotesContent.append(columns); doesnt. May 4, 2012 at 13:58
  • @Alex: I've added a live example. Note that your div elements are empty, so unless you're styling them, they're going to be hard to find on the page (as they'll have zero height). May 4, 2012 at 13:59
  • var page = jQuery(responseDetails.responseText); var columns = jQuery('div.columns',page); This is columns May 4, 2012 at 14:01
1

There are few things I would change. The callback provides the value as the second argument, not the first. Your call to append is followed by a space - which breaks. I'm not sure if you want to add columns to your new div, or the other way around.

var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];

$.each( positions, function( index, value ) {
  $( "<div>", { id : 'player_stats_block' + value } )
    .appendTo( "#columns" );
});

If columns is a legitimate reference to a dom element to begin with, you can put that back into the call to $.appendTo() at the end of the primary line. It was unclear as to what this variable represented in your original post.

4
  • @T.J.Crowder That value is processed. See jsbin.com/uqihaq/edit#javascript,html It appears that if you write out the full tag, the id value is not carried over. Including only the opening tag, as I did above, works.
    – Sampson
    May 4, 2012 at 14:22
  • @T.J.Crowder I'm speaking with Scott Gonzalez right now and he tells me the HTML string cannot have any attributes or content. It should be only the element.
    – Sampson
    May 4, 2012 at 14:28
  • @T.J.Crowder Yeah, I tested html immediately and found that it didn't get carried over either. Scott suggests the possibility of re-writing to look to <(\w+) instead, and inferring the nodeName from the HTML string. That would be cool. As of now, it essentially does document.createElement(selector).
    – Sampson
    May 4, 2012 at 14:33
  • @T.J.Crowder He was already looking at the ticket when I sent it to him.
    – Sampson
    May 4, 2012 at 14:37
0
var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];

jQuery.each( positions, function(index, value) {
   $('<div id="player_stats_block'+ value +'"></div>').append(columns);
});
0
-1

replace this with $(this) -->

var positions = [ "00", "01", "02", "03", "04", "05" ];
jQuery.each( positions, function(players) {
var playerNotesContent = document.createElement('div');
playerNotesContent.setAttribute('id', 'player_stats_block'+$(this));
$("#player_stats_block" + $(this)).append (columns); 
})
1
  • In this case, this will be a String object. api.jquery.com/jQuery.each It makes no sense whatsoever to call $() on them (and will, in fact, result in an error as $("00") -- the value on the first iteration -- is an invalid selector). May 4, 2012 at 14:01

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