Also you may want to namespace your elements (like <div my:title=""></div>) as sometimes setting attributes for elements that have attributes can cause issues. Like setting a value attribute for a <li> caused issues for us in IE 6 when the value was non-numeric
-Jonathan On Dec 11, 2007 1:03 PM, Jörn Zaefferer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Mario Moura schrieb: > > Hi All > > > > I am working in Jquery Forms > > http://malsup.com/jquery/form/#getting-started > > > > [...] > > So What I did is get with $(data).attr("id") the value of $id > > > > You can create how many itens you need in your php file and > > deserialized the response > > > > $(data).attr("title") > > $(data).attr("image") > > > > you can use xml, json but I think text is fast. > I guess parsing xml or json once and is rather faster then creating a > DOM element out of the reponse, then selecting attributes from it. Your > approach can be useful when you lack control over the serverside, but > otherwise I'd choose a more appropiate format. > > Jörn >

