1195

How could I achieve the following:

document.all.regTitle.innerHTML = 'Hello World';

Using jQuery where regTitle is my div id?

1
  • Funny how people still grasp on to vanilla js even when you ask for the answer in jquery... Jun 22, 2023 at 8:02

14 Answers 14

1798
$("#regTitle").html("Hello World");
0
355

The html() function can take strings of HTML, and will effectively modify the .innerHTML property.

$('#regTitle').html('Hello World');

However, the text() function will change the (text) value of the specified element, but keep the html structure.

$('#regTitle').text('Hello world'); 
3
86

If you instead have a jQuery object you want to render instead of the existing content: Then just reset the content and append the new.

var itemtoReplaceContentOf = $('#regTitle');
itemtoReplaceContentOf.html('');
newcontent.appendTo(itemtoReplaceContentOf);

Or:

$('#regTitle').empty().append(newcontent);
3
  • 21
    Good place to use itemtoReplaceContentOf.empty(); Sep 8, 2011 at 20:51
  • Is newcontent is a jQuery object? This isn't clear.
    – kmoser
    Aug 24, 2017 at 13:25
  • @kmoser In the first example, newcontent is indeed a jquery object. In the second example it can be of type htmlString or Element or Text or Array or jQuery as per api.jquery.com/append
    – Cine
    Aug 29, 2017 at 3:17
29

Here is your answer:

//This is the setter of the innerHTML property in jQuery
$('#regTitle').html('Hello World');

//This is the getter of the innerHTML property in jQuery
var helloWorld = $('#regTitle').html();
15

Answer:

$("#regTitle").html('Hello World');

Explanation:

$ is equivalent to jQuery. Both represent the same object in the jQuery library. The "#regTitle" inside the parenthesis is called the selector which is used by the jQuery library to identify which element(s) of the html DOM (Document Object Model) you want to apply code to. The # before regTitle is telling jQuery that regTitle is the id of an element inside the DOM.

From there, the dot notation is used to call the html function which replaces the inner html with whatever parameter you place in-between the parenthesis, which in this case is 'Hello World'.

15

There are already answers which give how to change Inner HTML of element.

But I would suggest, you should use some animation like Fade Out/ Fade In to change HTML which gives good effect of changed HTML rather instantly changing inner HTML.

Use animation to change Inner HTML

$('#regTitle').fadeOut(500, function() {
    $(this).html('Hello World!').fadeIn(500);
});

If you have many functions which need this, then you can call common function which changes inner Html.

function changeInnerHtml(elementPath, newText){
    $(elementPath).fadeOut(500, function() {
        $(this).html(newText).fadeIn(500);
    });
}
0
12

you can use either html or text function in jquery to achieve it

$("#regTitle").html("hello world");

OR

$("#regTitle").text("hello world");
12

Example

$( document ).ready(function() {
  $('.msg').html('hello world');
});
    <!DOCTYPE html>
    <html>
      <head>
        <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>    
      </head>
      <body>
        <div class="msg"></div>
      </body>
    </html>

11

jQuery's .html() can be used for setting and getting the contents of matched non empty elements (innerHTML).

var contents = $(element).html();
$(element).html("insert content into element");
1
  • 1
    The open and close parenthesis after html saved me. So remember folks those two are important.
    – Gellie Ann
    Dec 1, 2016 at 1:03
6
$("#regTitle")[0].innerHTML = 'Hello World';
6

Pure JS and Shortest

Pure JS

regTitle.innerHTML = 'Hello World'

regTitle.innerHTML = 'Hello World';
<div id="regTitle"></div>

Shortest

$(regTitle).html('Hello World'); 

// note: no quotes around regTitle
$(regTitle).html('Hello World'); 
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<div id="regTitle"></div>

4

Just to add some performance insights.

A few years ago I had a project, where we had issues trying to set a large HTML / Text to various HTML elements.

It appeared, that "recreating" the element and injecting it to the DOM was way faster than any of the suggested methods to update the DOM content.

So something like:

var text = "very big content";
$("#regTitle").remove();
$("<div id='regTitle'>" + text + "</div>").appendTo("body");
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

Should get you a better performance. I haven't recently tried to measure that (browsers should be clever these days), but if you're looking for performance it may help.

The downside is that you will have more work to keep the DOM and the references in your scripts pointing to the right object.

3

jQuery has few functions which work with text, if you use text() one, it will do the job for you:

$("#regTitle").text("Hello World");

Also, you can use html() instead, if you have any html tag...

1
var abc = document.getElementById("regTitle");
abc.innerHTML = "Hello World";
1
  • the question is regarding JQUERY - NOT - Javascript!
    – TV-C-1-5
    Feb 7, 2022 at 0:07

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