0

I trying to make a script that creates some buttons based on a JSON i pass to it with the attributes I need, like this:

var opts = {};
opts.buttons = [{
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-default",
    text: "No"
    }, {
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-primary",
    text: "Yes"
}];

var arr = [];
var button = $("<button></button>");
_.each(opts.buttons, function (v, k) {
    button.prop("type", v.type)
        .prop("class", v.klass)
        .html(v.text);
    arr.push(button);
});

And then, kind of stringify them, like so:

var str = arr.join('');
$('#someEl').html(str);

But this is not working as I thought it would. The return is [object Object] [object Object] instead of the button tags.

How can I do that? Any help would be very nice.

2
  • Is there a reason why you are not adding them to the HTML immediately? You could simplify the logic a bit, if you can add them on the fly . . .
    – talemyn
    Jan 31, 2014 at 20:02
  • possible duplicate of jQuery appending an array of elements
    – Givi
    Jan 31, 2014 at 20:03

2 Answers 2

5

Try this instead:

opts.buttons = [{
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-default",
    text: "No"
    }, {
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-primary",
    text: "Yes"
}];

var arr = [];
_.each(opts.buttons, function (v, k) {
    var button = $("<button></button>");
    button.prop("type", v.type)
        .prop("class", v.klass)
        .html(v.text);
    arr.push(button);
});

And later...

_.each(arr, function (b) {
    $('#someEl').append(b);
});

Note 1: opts.buttons is not JSON, it is object literal.

Note 2: $('#someEl').html sets HTML content, i.e. its argument should be string. You can use:

var arr = [];
_.each(opts.buttons, function (v, k) {
    var button = $("<button></button>");
    button.prop("type", v.type)
        .prop("class", v.klass)
        .html(v.text);
    arr.push(button[0].outerHTML);
});

var str = arr.join('');
$('#someEl').html(str);

if you insist to use it.

Note 3: You get [object Object] because the jQuery button elements are casted to string (because of the call of the join function), if the toString method of given object is not overrided it uses the default toString implementation which gives [object Object] representation.

0
1
var buttonsCfg = [{
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-default",
    text: "No"
    }, {
    type: "button",
    klass: "btn-primary",
    text: "Yes"
}];

//you can use map to efficiently create an array from another
var buttons = buttonsCfg.map(function (cfg) {
    return $('<button>')
        .addClass(cfg.klass)
        .text(cfg.text)
        .prop('type', cfg.type);
});

//you shouldn't work with HTML strings when you already have constructed DOM elements
$('#someEl').append(buttons);

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.