25

So I have following string:

var s = '<span>Some Text</span> Some other Text';

The result should be a string with the content "Some other Text".

I tried...

var $s = $(s).not('span');

...and a lot of other stuff with remove(), not(), etc. but nothing worked.

Any suggestions? I could match the string with regex, but I prefer a common jQuery solution.

edit:

I do not search a solution with regex, I'm just wondering why this example does not work: http://jsfiddle.net/q9crX/150/

1
  • did you actually add that html to the DOM somewhere? You need to add it before you can select it using jQuery Aug 24, 2012 at 13:05

6 Answers 6

57

You can wrap your string in a jQuery object and do some sort of a manipulation like this:

var removeElements = function(text, selector) {
    var wrapped = $("<div>" + text + "</div>");
    wrapped.find(selector).remove();
    return wrapped.html();
}

USAGE

var removedSpanString = removeElements("<span>Some Text</span> Some other Text", "span");

The beauty of this approach is that you can specify a jquery selector which to remove. i.e. you may wish to remove the <th> in a string. This would be very handy in that case. Hope this helps!

1
  • Ok thank you, this one worked ans isn't a regex! :) But check out the edit of my question, maybe there is a solution for my jsfiddle-example as well.
    – Fidelis
    Aug 24, 2012 at 13:22
15

A very simple approach:

var html = '<span>Remove <b>tags &amp; entities</b></span>';
var noTagText = $(html).text();
// ==> noTagText = 'Remove tags & entities'

Note that it will remove tags but also html entities.

0
11

This may suit your needs:

<([^ >]+)[^>]*>.*?</\1>|<[^/]+/>

Regular expression visualization

Debuggex Demo

In JavaScript:

$s = s.replace(/<([^ >]+)[^>]*>.*?<\/\1>|<[^\/]+\/>/ig, "");

It also removes self-closing tags (e.g. <br />).

4
  • 1
    I feel like writing regex parsers for anything with an existing parser usually means you are doing something wrong.
    – bytesized
    May 14, 2015 at 19:37
  • @bytesized You're absolutely right, I wouldn't have answered this question that way nowadays.
    – sp00m
    May 15, 2015 at 13:10
  • 1
    Great debuggex visualization!
    – nycynik
    Apr 3, 2016 at 0:40
  • Thank you so much!
    – fre2ak
    Apr 7, 2016 at 10:12
4

Just remove html tag like this

DEMO

var s = '<span>Some Text</span> Some other Text';
var r = /<(\w+)[^>]*>.*<\/\1>/gi;
s.replace(r,"");

Answer given over here :http://www.webdeveloper.com/forum/showthread.php?t=252483

4
  • @sp00m - thanks for into but wokrs with given input..its need to modify as op want Aug 24, 2012 at 13:14
  • Yes this regex is really great :) It should work for me, but I still have this problem here: jsfiddle.net/q9crX/150
    – Fidelis
    Aug 24, 2012 at 13:28
  • I've downvoted this answer because I don't believe that using regex to parse HTML is valid. Especially when this question is using jQuery which can easily manipulate the DOM nodes.
    – David Yell
    Jan 13, 2014 at 12:24
  • This provides a better solution. stackoverflow.com/questions/10585029/…
    – David Yell
    Jan 13, 2014 at 14:18
3

Just do the following:

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4/jquery.min.js"></script>

<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
 $("span").not("span div").each(
 function(index, element) {
$("span").remove();
 }
 );
 });

</script>

<span>Some Text</span> Some other Text
2

Check link

e.g. More Specific to your case :-

var s = '<span>Some Text</span> Some other Text';
var $s = s.replace(/<span>(.*)<\/span>/g, "");

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