Question

Here is my code

$('#right').load('textes.html #nicolas');
$('#right').load('textes.html #antoine');

the problem is that the content of the div antoine overwrite in the right div the content load by the div nicolas

div #right : load div nicolas from file textes.html = ok div #right : load div antoine from file textes.html = overwrite content = No!

I like to append antoine to nicolas I like to add nicolas then add antone so the #right will be nicolas + antoine

I have try to get the content into a var... nope

any idea ?


on top of that... i will like to add a rule <hr> BETWEEN each load


Maybe something like that can be done... it don't work !

$('#right').load('textes.shtml #nicolas').append('<hr>').load('textes.shtml #antoine'); return false;
Was it helpful?

Solution

Maybe I'm missing something but it seems like you all have been missing the fact that this is an ajax call and you are calling functions procedurally and not as a callback function based on a successful ajax response.

Besides, if you are doing anything more complex than loading some (X)HTML into an element, you should probably use one of the more powerful jQuery ajax methods (i.e., get() or post() or ajax()).

Assuming you'll get (X)HTML in the response:

// Only ONE ajax call and very simply parsing... 
$.get('textes.html', {}, function(data) {
    var $response = $('<div />').html(data);
    var $nicolas = $response.find('#nicolas')
    var $antoine = $response.find('#antoine');
    $('#right').append($nicolas).append($antoine);
},'html');

It's really as simple as that.

OTHER TIPS

WHy not load them both in one call:

$('#right').load('textes.html #nicolas,#antoine');

EDIT
Inspired by Justice way I thought of the follwoing:

var $page = $('<div />').load('textes.html #nicolas,#antoine');
var $nicolas = $page.find('#nicolas');
var $antoine = $page.find('#antoine');
$('#right')
 .html($nicolas)
 .append('<hr/>')
 .append($antoine);

This will make only one (or two, depending on what firefox feels like) calls to the server. Thus saving bandwidth. But it also gives you more freedom in how to insert the elements and in which order.

Here's the full source code for a solution.

I've hosted a working sample on JSBin.com: http://jsbin.com/ulodu (Editable via http://jsbin.com/ulodu/edit)

<html>
<head>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.3.2/jquery.js"></script>
<title>Sandbox</title>
<meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<script>
$(function(){
  $.get(
    'http://jsbin.com/oyuho',
    function(response){
      /* 
        Wrap the response in a <div /> so that we can use
        find() instead of filter(). Also remove <script> tags.
        This is essentially what $.load() does.
      */  
      var responseWrapper = $('<div />').append(response.replace(/<script(.|\s)*?\/script>/g, ""))
      $('#content')
        .append(responseWrapper.find('#nicolas'))
        .append('<hr />')
        .append(responseWrapper.find('#antoine'));
    }
  );
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
  <div id="content"></div>
</body>
</html>
var nicolas = $('<div />').load('textes.html #nicolas');
var antoine = $('<div />').load('textes.html #antoine');
$('#right')
    .append(nicolas.children())
    .append('<hr />')
    .append(antoine.children())
;

Or, Pim Jager's way.

See the appendTo function.

I got it working with the REALLY SIMPLE answer of KyleFarris

I even simplified it a little more, and it work fine

Thnaks everyone, here is the final code :

<script>
$.get('textes.shtml', {}, function(data) {
    var $response = $('<div />').html(data);
    $('#right')
    .append($response.find('#nicolas'))
    .append('<hr />')
    .append($response.find('#antoine'));
},'html');
</script>
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