3

Reading the docs, I'd expect $("#wrap2").remove(".error") to remove all .error elements from #wrap2. However looking at this JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/hCGUS/ it doesn't appear to be the case?

$(function() {
    $("#wrap1 .error").remove(); // works 
    $("#wrap2").remove(".error"); // fails ...
})​

5 Answers 5

8

As the docs state, the selector parameter to remove is

A selector expression that filters the set of matched elements to be removed.

The first example is what you should use to remove elements with class error contained in an element with id wrap1.

The second example will find the element with id wrap2 and then filter that set for elements with class error, and remove those elements. That is, it will only remove elements which match #wrap2.error.

3

According to the jQuery document. I think

$("#wrap2").remove(".error");

equals to:

$("#wrap2.error").remove();

Means that an element has id wrap2 and class error

3

The docs say that when passing an argument, it acts as a filter on the wrapped set it's being called on, so if you have a jQuery set, but only want to remove some of the elements in the set, you can pass a selector to remove just those.

1

Building off of x1a4's answer, $("wrap2") only contains one element, not any of its children. If you did:

$("wrap2 *").remove(".error")

it would perform identically to your working version.

0
-3

Please use removeClass instead of remove

$("#wrap2").removeClass("error");

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