That is a bit cryptic, what do you mean by completed? The AJAX call
does successfully fire the call back for success.
It is after this call back completes, that a "scrubber" function is
called on the newly arrived div. Which, we are told is undefined.
So, the question is why would a div that displays in the browser not
be available by a reference such as:
alert($("#MyDiv").html()); or alert($("#MyDiv").text());
On Apr 9, 9:36 pm, Hamish Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is this an ajax call? 90% of these questions seem to come down to the
> call not being completed.
>
> On Apr 10, 1:38 pm, OhNoMrBill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Yup, agreed. Tried that method too. Both return undefined. Any other
> > thoughts on why the div and/or it's contents are not showing up in the
> > DOM?
>
> > On Apr 9, 4:49 pm, Wizzud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Your div does not actually contain any HTML, just text.
> > > Try ...
> > > alert($("#MyDiv").text());
>
> > > On Apr 9, 8:39 pm, OhNoMrBill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > I have an HTML partial coming back from a server that includes a named
> > > > div (ex: <div id="MyDiv">blah</div>)
>
> > > > When I try to run the following on it, it shows the div as empty:
>
> > > > alert($("#MyDiv").html());
>
> > > > I suspect the DOM is not aware of the retuned div (though, why it
> > > > displays is then a huge mystery).
>
> > > > Can anyone clarify this for me? Maybe tell me how to tap the DOM on
> > > > the shoulder with the newly returned div?
>
> > > > Thanks much!- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -