If I use the following then it is displayed like html:
<h1>heading</h1>
This will be the result:
heading
But how do I unescape all the characters inside <code>
?
Which results exactly what inside the <code>
:
<h1>heading</h1>
Either replace the tag syntax with HTML entities
str = '<foo>';
str = str.replace(/</g, '<').replace(/>/g, '>');
str; // "<foo>"
Or insert it into the page explicitly as text, e.g.
parent.appendChild(document.createTextNode(str));
You may also wish to escape single and double quotes to be on the safe side if you plan to use random strings in attributes, too.
str = str.replace(/"/g, '"').replace(/'/g, ''');
<code>
is that enough to replace just greater and smaller signs only?
Jul 8, 2014 at 10:58
<
symbol with <
, it'll ignore the >
.
Jul 8, 2014 at 10:58
>
and was considering including quotes too, just in case OP was considering using it in other places
<
, though, because that's the start of a tag. If that's not present, the browser will automatically ignore everything else.
Jul 8, 2014 at 11:00
str = '<a --> b>';
put inside <!-- reasoning: -->
<
character on screen instead of it being treated as the start of a tag?.text()
instead of.html()
to display it. Or if the text is statically display replace the opening<
with<
javascript
andjquery
? You aren't using them in the question.