Yeah, you can remove the leading double slash pre-1.2 as well. For HTML documents, the leading double slash is equivalent to $('html some-selector'). No need for it, as far as I can tell.

On Sep 11, 2007, at 1:22 PM, Wizzud wrote:



You can remove the leading double slash? ...
$("tr[aID='1'][bID='2']").remove(); //v1.2+ only


Will B. wrote:


Doesn't that still make it XPath style?

On Sep 11, 10:54 am, Karl Swedberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In version 1.2, you should be able to do the same thing by removing
the @ symbol from the selectors.

--Karl
_________________
Karl Swedbergwww.englishrules.comwww.learningjquery.com

On Sep 11, 2007, at 9:45 AM, Will B. wrote:



Wow...it did show up, then! Darn. I reposted (almost) for nothing.
Thanks for answering, Klaus.

Is there a way to do this w/o using XPath? Now that it's been pushed
off to a plugin, I'd rather stick with core Jquery.

- Will

On Sep 11, 8:31 am, Klaus Hartl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Will B. wrote:
I currently know how to do this:
  $("//[EMAIL PROTECTED]'123']").remove() ;

This removes a table row that of the style:  <tr customID="123" >

However, these rows in this complex table also have another fashion
that I've been using:
  <tr customID="123" aID="1" bID="2" cID="3">

How can I use Jquery to select rows that have aID="1" and
bID="2", but
(in this case) ignoring the customID and the cID.

Will, try:

$("//[EMAIL PROTECTED]'1'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'2']").remove();

--Klaus




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