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Ok this is really frusturating me because I've done this a hundred times before, and this time it isn't working. So I know I'm doing something wrong, I just can't figure it out.

I am using the jQuery .get routine to load html from another file. I don't want to use .load() because it always replaces the children of the element I'm loading content into.

Here is my .get request:

$(document).ready(function() {
    $.get('info.html', {}, function(html) {
        // debug code
        console.log($(html).find('ul').html());
        // end debug code
    });
});

The file 'info.html' is a standard xhtml file with a proper doctype, and the only thing in the body is a series of ul's that I need to access. For some reason, the find function is giving me a null value.

In firebug, the GET request is showing the proper RESPONSE text and when I run

console.log(html);

Instead of the current console.log line, I get the whole info.html as output, like I would expect.

Any ideas?

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1 Answer

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You cannot pull in an entire XHTML document. You can only handle tags that exist within the <body> of an html document. Frustrating. Strip everything from info.html that isn't within your <body> tag and try it again.

There are other potential ways around this issue - check below "Stackoverflow Related Items" at the base of this response.

From the Doc: (http://docs.jquery.com/Core/jQuery#htmlownerDocument)

"HTML string cannot contain elements that are invalid within a div, such as html, head, body, or title elements."

Stackoverflow Related Items:

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So I need to write a php script to sit inbetween the 2 html files and have the get request go there, huh....that is frusturating, i was hoping to avoid that. – Paul Jun 26 at 17:46
I believe so, yes. In all honesty, you could use phpQuery within your PHP Script. it will allow you jQuery style selectors making it easy to return the <BODY> contents. – Jonathan Sampson Jun 26 at 17:49
stripping out everything but what's within the <body> doesn't work either...i get the correct response but can't parse it...thanks anyway! – Paul Jun 26 at 17:53
Your document is well-formed, right? Nothing like <span/> etc in it? – Jonathan Sampson Jun 26 at 17:56
no, it's just html->body->ul->li. body has a few ul->li sets under it but it's all valid. I decided i am just going to use .load() into a hidden div, parse the data, and prepend the parsed data to where i want it to be – Paul Jun 26 at 18:01
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