OK, so you do need AJAX. Well, not the "X" part, you just need the asynchronous Javascript part. The server can return XML or JSON, but in your case it's simplest to have it just return the blob of HTML you want to put into the div.
But, you do have to make a roundtrip to the server, because nothing has changed in the browser, only the contents of the page on the server have changed.
Here's a 30-second tutorial that explains everything. I'll adapt it to what you want here.
First, on the server side, you already have a PHP script, let's call it "page.php", that returns this whole HTML page. You will need to make a second PHP script, let's call it "div.php", that returns just the contents of the div.
(You could also have page.php look for a parameter, like $_GET['divonly'], and that way have only one PHP script that handles both jobs. It doesn't matter ... you can do it however you want, just as long as you have a second URL to hit on the server side to retrieve the new content for the div.)
In the HTML of page.php, you've already got:
<div id="target"> ... </div>
And now you've added div.php, which returns only the " ... ", not a full HTML page.
OK, so now, the Javascript. You don't have to use a library if you don't want to -- what's nice about the libraries is that they take care of all of the cross-browser issues.
But here's what you want, adapted from the example in pure Javascript:
var refreshDelay = 10000;
/* Creates the XMLHTTPRequest object depending on the browser */
function createRequestObject() {
var ro;
if(navigator.appName == "Microsoft Internet Explorer"){
ro = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
}else{
ro = new XMLHttpRequest();
}
return ro;
}
var http = createRequestObject();
/* Makes the request back to /div.php ... change the URL to whatever
script you put on the server side to return the contents of the div only */
function sndReq() {
http.open('get', '/div.php');
http.onreadystatechange = handleResponse;
http.send(null);
}
/* Does the work of replacing the contents of the div id="target" when
the XMLHTTPRequest is received, and schedules next update */
function handleResponse() {
if(http.readyState == 4){
var response = http.responseText;
document.getElementById('target').innerHTML = response;
setTimeout(sndReq(), refreshDelay);
}
}
/* Schedules the first request back to the server. Subsequent refreshes
are scheduled in handleResponse() */
setTimeout(sndReq(), refreshDelay);
document.getElementById("target").innerHTML = document.getElementById("target").innerHTML
to "refresh" a div with its current contents.