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I'd like to set a variable to equal the text of a substring. Specifically, if a[href] begins with "download.php", I'd like to set the variable "elm" to the value of a[href], after the 19th character.

if ("a[href^='download.php']") {
    var elm = $('a[href]'.substring(19));
};

I've tried using .text() and .html(), but can't get it working. Can someone point out my errors? Many thanks.

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  • 3
    "a[href^='download.php']" is a string which is a truthy value, you are doing something fundamentally wrong here.
    – Ram
    Oct 11, 2013 at 17:40
  • A boolean element needs to be inside of an if statement, not a string
    – Jose
    Oct 11, 2013 at 17:40

2 Answers 2

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var a = $("a[href^='download.php']");
if (a.length) {
  var elm = a.attr("href").substring(19);
}
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2

You dont need your if statement, since you are passing a string which is a truthy value.

To get the value of href atributte use $.attr

var elm = $("a[href^='download.php']").attr('href').substring(19);

and if you want to check if exists any element who match with [href^='download.php'] use

var el = $("a[href^='download.php']");
if(el.length) {
    var elm = el.first().attr('href').substring(19);
}
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  • 1
    No, if there is no element that matches, it will break the script. since attr('href') will be undefined. That is the whole point of check in OP's code.
    – PSL
    Oct 11, 2013 at 17:41
  • Better but again why do you need to create jq object again. You can cache it. I mean a lot like the other answer.
    – PSL
    Oct 11, 2013 at 17:54

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