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Saw this example on the jQuery examples page for Ajax:

var xmlDocument = [create xml document];
$.ajax({
		url: "page.php",
		processData: false,
		data: xmlDocument,
		success: someFunction
    });

How do I take a string like:

var t = '<foo><bar>something</bar></foo>';

And convert that to a XML DOM object? cross-browser?

UPDATE: Please see comments to karim79's answer.

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2 Answers

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Wrap it in a jQuery object. Then use normal DOM methods on it.

var t = $('<foo><bar>something</bar></foo>');

//loop over 'bar' nodes
t.find('bar').each(function () {
    alert($(this).text());
});

If you want to convert it back to a plain string (after modifying it for example) you can do it like so:

//then convert it back to a string
//for IE 
if (window.ActiveXObject) {
    var str = t.xml;
    alert(str);
 }
// code for Mozilla, Firefox, Opera, etc.
else {
   var str = (new XMLSerializer()).serializeToString(t);
   alert(str);
}

EDIT: The $.ajax manual says (on the processData option):

By default, data passed in to the data option as an object (technically, anything other than a string) will be processed and transformed into a query string, fitting to the default content-type "application/x-www-form-urlencoded". If you want to send DOMDocuments, or other non-processed data, set this option to false.

So if you're passing a jQuery object to the server, you'll need to set that to true, or omit it altogether (it is set to true by default). Hope that helped.

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Maybe I'm getting something wrong in the $.ajax call. I did wrap it like you said. Then my log on the server shows I'm passing in: [object Object] What should I try now? – B. Tyndall Aug 17 at 21:28
Am I doing something wrong with .ajax() ? I just passed it as a string and it worked. weird. Does this have something to do with the processData option? or another option I'm not turning on? – B. Tyndall Aug 17 at 21:41
+1 thanks for these examples – B. Tyndall Aug 17 at 21:41
@Tyndall - see my edit. Basically, if you're passing an XML string to the server, the setting you currently have is correct (processData : false. If you pass the jQuery object, you'll need to either get rid of that option or set it to true. – karim79 Aug 17 at 22:06
1  
Thanks for the explanation of the processData - "jQuery in Action" didn't explain as well as you did in 4 sentences. – B. Tyndall Aug 18 at 14:24
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vote up 1 vote down

Just a heads up on calling find - if it's a top level element you need to use filter instead.

var t = $('<foo><bar>something</bar></foo>');

//loop over 'foo' nodes
t.filter('foo').each(function () {
  alert($(this).find('bar').text());
});
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@pubb - you are right, I skipped over that detail as I always loop over the second-level elements. +1 for pointing it out. – karim79 Aug 17 at 23:51

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