UPDATE 1:
I can get around the problem with a try/catch, but I would prefer not to use this method when I know what the problem is:
try {
buildHTML.push( "<tr><td>" + day.td[0].div.abbr.content + "</td><td><img src='" + day.td[1].div.div.img.src + "' /></td><td>" + day.td[2].span[0].span.content + "</td><td>" + day.td[3].span[0].span.content + "</td><td>" + day.td[4].span[0].span[1].content + "</td>");
} catch(err) {
buildHTML.push( "<tr><td>" + day.td[0].div.abbr.content + "</td><td><img src='" + day.td[1].div.div.img.src + "' /></td><td></td><td>" + day.td[3].span[0].span.content + "</td><td>" + day.td[4].span[0].span[1].content + "</td>");
}
ORIGINAL QUESTION:
Using the following jsonp service:
I use the following script to capture the data:
$(document).ready(function() {
get_bbc_weather();
function get_bbc_weather() {
$.ajax({
url: "http://query.yahooapis.com/v1/public/yql?q=select%20*%20from%20html%20where%20url%20%3D%20%22http%3A%2F%2Fnews.bbc.co.uk%2Fweather%2Fforecast%2F4276%3F%26search%3Dgerrards%2520cross%26itemsPerPage%3D10%26region%3Dworld%26area%3DGerrards%2520Cross%22%20and%20xpath%3D'%2F%2Ftbody'&format=json&callback=cbfunc22&rand=" + Math.random(),
type: 'GET',
dataType: 'jsonp',
jsonp: 'callback',
jsonpCallback: 'cbfunc22',
error: function(xhr, status, error) {
alert(xhr.responseText);
},
success: function(data) {
var buildHTML = [];
var weather = data.query.results.tbody.tr;
buildHTML.push("<tr><td>Day</td><td>Weather</td><td>Max<br />Day<br />(°C)</td><td>Min<br />Night<br />(°C)</td><td>Wind<br />(MPH)</td>");
for (var i = 0; i < weather.length; i++) {
var day = weather[i];
buildHTML.push( "<tr><td>" + day.td[0].div.abbr.content + "</td><td><img src='" + day.td[1].div.div.img.src + "' /></td><td>" + day.td[2].span[0].span.content + "</td><td>" + day.td[3].span[0].span.content + "</td><td>" + day.td[4].span[0].span[1].content + "</td>");
}
$('#divContent1').empty().append("<table>" + buildHTML.join("</tr>") + "</table>")
}
});
}
});
However, at a certain time of the day, day.td[2].span[0].span.content becomes null. When this happens, how do I detect it and use the next temp min section instead only for the first day? The rest of the days should continue to use the temp max section.
try...catchonly replaces the null value with an empty value. Is that what you want, or do you want some other value as explained in the question? If so, in "the next temp min section", what does "next" and "section" refer to? – Guffa Jul 12 '11 at 18:08day.td[2].span[0].span.contentbecomesnull"? That statement seems to have caused half the answers being nothing more than answers to the question "How do I make a pretty conditional?" – mercator Jul 14 '11 at 21:51