I'm trying to use a wildcard to get the id of all the elements whose id begin with "jander". I tried $('#jander*')
, $('#jander%')
but it doesn't work..
I know I can use classes of the elements to solve it, but it is also possible using wildcards??
<script type="text/javascript">
var prueba = [];
$('#jander').each(function () {
prueba.push($(this).attr('id'));
});
alert(prueba);
});
</script>
<div id="jander1"></div>
<div id="jander2"></div>
$("[id*=jander]")
would select all elements with an ID containing the string jander.
To get all the elements starting with "jander" you should use:
$("[id^=jander]")
To get those that end with "jander"
$("[id$=jander]")
See also the JQuery documentation
Since the title suggests wildcard you could also use this:
$(document).ready(function(){ console.log($('[id*=ander]')); });
This will select the given string anywhere in the id
.
Try the jQuery starts-with
selector, '^=', eg
[id^="jander"]
I have to ask though, why don't you want to do this using classes?
for classes you can use:
div[class^="jander"]
To get the id from the wildcard match:
$('[id^=pick_]').click( function(event) { // Do something with the id # here: alert('Picked: '+ event.target.id.slice(5)); } );
When you have a more complex id string the double quotes are mandatory.
For example if you have an id like this: id="2.2"
, the correct way to access it is: $('input[id="2.2"]')
As much as possible use the double quotes, for safety reasons.
Success story sharing
$('input[name^="news"]').val('news here!')