$(element)
returns an object made by jQuery that has a reference to the element.
$(array)
is the same but with several references.
And here, you're kinda doing:
$($(element))
except that as you pass an array in, it apparently doesn't check if they're already jQuery objects.
Looks like they didn't think of this usecase.
They don't handle arrays: https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/master/src/core.js
Wait... they do:
var b = document.body;
$( [ b.firstChild, b.lastChild ] ).text( );//OK
var b = document.body;
$( [ $( b.firstChild ), $( b.lastChild ) ] ).text( );//FAIL
The problem seems to be in makeArray line 645 because the init method doesn't seem to take care of array and makeArray is called if nothing matched. And makeArray calls merge that merges the jQuery object (which has properties that an array must have) into the results of selector or [] and return it.
Problem solved: https://gist.github.com/947169
If you want to see how, look between <changes> and </changes>
I'll post an issue or do a pull request.
Until they change it, you can just include: https://gist.github.com/raw/947169/6a9711ead197e17a636d7c43b72dc8efd7a6baec/jQuery.js
Ticket: http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/9011
Pull request: https://github.com/jquery/jquery/pull/359
var lis$ = $("selector").map(function () { /* ... */ })
that returns disconnected DOM nodes. You cannot then just appendlis$
, but instead you have to loop throughlis$
and add each one by one.[li$, li2$]
doesn't work; it seems thatlis$
should.