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EDIT:

Using $.text() works as expected, the problem was originating from somewhere else. I'll not delete the question for future reference, in case someone runs into the - seemingly - same problem. Please also have a look at the accepted answer for solution.


I'm developing a rich text editor that reads contents from a textarea and creates an editable div using that content.

The problem is that I can't seem to get the HTML tags from the textarea, only the plain text.

HTML code

<textarea id="rtf-1">
    <h2>Big monster&nbsp;</h2><p>Kosova long crowing rooster test.</p>
</textarea>

Javascript code

var html = $('#rtf-1').html();

Can't figure out why, but var html is always 'Big monster Kosova long crowing rooster test.', the tags are assassinated somewhere in the process. The same happens when I try to use $.text() or $.val().

I need var html to be <h2>Big monster&nbsp;</h2><p>Kosova long crowing rooster test.</p>. Any advice on how this could be done?


Thanks for reading my answer. I'm not looking for alternative ways of initializing the rich text editor other than from the textarea contents (value) itself, and I'm certainly not looking for already existing RTF editors, like TinyMCE. If you can, please answer the question above.

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    maybe use .text() instead? It will extract the text itself (tags and all), and then you can .parseHTML() afterward to get the HTML values again. something like var html = $.parseHTML($('#rtf-1').text()); Oct 14, 2014 at 17:56
  • @PlantTheIdea wouldn't that be something more like var domNodes = $.parseHTML(...)? $.parseHTML accepts an HTML string (as opposed to returning one).
    – jmar777
    Oct 14, 2014 at 18:00
  • Thank you for helping, as it turns out, the code works fine with .text(), but the problem was with associating textarea elements with their corresponding divs
    – John Weisz
    Oct 14, 2014 at 18:09

1 Answer 1

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textarea elements don't actually hold HTML, so to get the equivalent of a string that represents the HTML, you would want to use .text(). E.g.,

$('#render-to-me').html($('#rtf-1').text());

Here's a JSFiddle to demonstrate: http://jsfiddle.net/44xjew92/

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  • Thank you for answering, but as it turns out, it's a problem that originates from associating a given textarea with its corresponding div.
    – John Weisz
    Oct 14, 2014 at 18:07
  • What do you mean by "associating" there?
    – jmar777
    Oct 14, 2014 at 18:17
  • The div created for rich-text editing gets assigned a generated but unique ID rtf-editor-#. The data-rtf-editor property of textarea equals the id of that new div. To be able to use the textarea in forms, an event handler rtfchange is also bound to the new div, one that updates the... well, now associated textarea contents. This association is where the problem originated from.
    – John Weisz
    Oct 14, 2014 at 18:24

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