jQuery( html [, ownerDocument ] )Returns: jQuery
Description: Creates DOM elements on the fly from the provided string of raw HTML.
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version added: 1.0jQuery( html [, ownerDocument ] )
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htmlType: htmlStringA string of HTML to create on the fly. Note that this parses HTML, not XML.
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ownerDocumentType: documentA document in which the new elements will be created.
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version added: 1.4jQuery( html, attributes )
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htmlType: htmlStringA string defining a single, standalone, HTML element (e.g. <div/> or <div></div>).
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attributesType: PlainObjectAn object of attributes, events, and methods to call on the newly-created element.
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Creating New Elements
If a string is passed as the parameter to $()
, jQuery examines the string to see if it looks like HTML (i.e., it starts with <tag ... >
). If not, the string is interpreted as a selector expression, as explained above. But if the string appears to be an HTML snippet, jQuery attempts to create new DOM elements as described by the HTML. Then a jQuery object is created and returned that refers to these elements. You can perform any of the usual jQuery methods on this object:
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$( "<p id='test'>My <em>new</em> text</p>" ).appendTo( "body" ); |
For explicit parsing of a string to HTML, use the $.parseHTML() method.
By default, elements are created with an .ownerDocument
matching the document into which the jQuery library was loaded. Elements being injected into a different document should be created using that document, e.g., $("<p>hello iframe</p>", $("#myiframe").prop("contentWindow").document)
.
If the HTML is more complex than a single tag without attributes, as it is in the above example, the actual creation of the elements is handled by the browser's .innerHTML
mechanism. In most cases, jQuery creates a new <div>
element and sets the innerHTML
property of the element to the HTML snippet that was passed in. When the parameter has a single tag (with optional closing tag or quick-closing) — $( "<img />" )
or $( "<img>" )
, $( "<a></a>" )
or $( "<a>" )
— jQuery creates the element using the native JavaScript .createElement()
function.
When passing in complex HTML, some browsers may not generate a DOM that exactly replicates the HTML source provided. As mentioned, jQuery uses the browser's .innerHTML
property to parse the passed HTML and insert it into the current document. During this process, some browsers filter out certain elements such as <html>
, <title>
, or <head>
elements. As a result, the elements inserted may not be representative of the original string passed.
Filtering isn't, however, limited to these tags. For example, Internet Explorer prior to version 8 will also convert all href
properties on links to absolute URLs, and Internet Explorer prior to version 9 will not correctly handle HTML5 elements without the addition of a separate compatibility layer.
To ensure cross-platform compatibility, the snippet must be well-formed. Tags that can contain other elements should be paired with a closing tag:
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$( "<a href='https://jquery.com'></a>" ); |
Tags that cannot contain elements may be quick-closed or not:
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$( "<img>" ); $( "<input>" ); |
When passing HTML to jQuery()
, note that text nodes are not treated as DOM elements. With the exception of a few methods (such as .content()
), they are generally ignored or removed. E.g:
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var el = $( "<br>2<br>3" ); // returns [<br>, "2", <br>] el = $( "<br>2<br>3 >" ); // returns [<br>, "2", <br>, "3 >"] |
This behavior is expected. As of jQuery 1.9.0 (and unless using the jQuery Migrate plugin), jQuery()
requires the HTML string to start with a <
(i.e text nodes cannot appear at the front of the HTML string).
As of jQuery 1.4, the second argument to jQuery()
can accept a plain object consisting of a superset of the properties that can be passed to the .attr() method.
Important: If the second argument is passed, the HTML string in the first argument must represent a simple element with no attributes. As of jQuery 1.4, any event type can be passed in, and the following jQuery methods can be called: val, css, html, text, data, width, height, or offset.
As of jQuery 1.8, any jQuery instance method (a method of jQuery.fn
) can be used as a property of the object passed to the second parameter:
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$( "<div></div>", { "class": "my-div", on: { touchstart: function( event ) { // Do something } } }).appendTo( "body" ); |
The name "class"
must be quoted in the object since it is a JavaScript reserved word, and "className"
cannot be used since it refers to the DOM property, not the attribute.
While the second argument is convenient, its flexibility can lead to unintended consequences (e.g. $( "<input>", {size: "4"} )
calling the .size()
method instead of setting the size attribute). The previous code block could thus be written instead as:
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$( "<div></div>" ) .addClass( "my-div" ) .on({ touchstart: function( event ) { // Do something } }) .appendTo( "body" ); |
Examples:
Create a div element (and all of its contents) dynamically and append it to the body element. Internally, an element is created and its innerHTML property set to the given markup.
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$( "<div><p>Hello</p></div>" ).appendTo( "body" ) |
Create some DOM elements.
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$( "<div/>", { "class": "test", text: "Click me!", click: function() { $( this ).toggleClass( "test" ); } }) .appendTo( "body" ); |