Yeah, that's what I would say, too. The person who mentioned it said it affects feedburner and google reader. I can neither confirm nor deny that claim, though.

cf. 
http://www.learningjquery.com/2008/10/1-awesome-way-to-avoid-the-not-so-excellent-flash-of-amazing-unstyled-content#comment-63276

--Karl

____________
Karl Swedberg
www.englishrules.com
www.learningjquery.com




On Dec 5, 2008, at 2:03 PM, brian wrote:


I'd say that's a broken feed-reader.

On Fri, Dec 5, 2008 at 12:46 PM, Karl Swedberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Not sure about that, but one advantage of full URLs is that they work in all feed readers. I was using "root-relative" URLs on my blog until somebody
complained that these links wouldn't work for him in his feed reader.

--Karl

On Dec 5, 2008, at 11:29 AM, Andy Matthews wrote:

As an FYI, while I personally prefer relative URLs for simplicity and
code reuse, full URLs in the HREF attribute provide slightly better
SEO due to the replication of the domain name.

On Dec 5, 10:23 am, Andy Matthews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Here's a reference URL by the way:

http://www.hscripts.com/tutorials/javascript/document-object.php

On Dec 5, 10:21 am, "Andy Matthews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Matthias...

Attr('href') will give you whatever is contained in the href property. If

you want the "http://otherpage.com"; then that needs to be contained in the

href property. Using the 'domain' property of the document object will give

you the first part:

       <script type="text/javascript">

       <!--

               alert(document.domain);

       //-->

       </script>

andy

-----Original Message-----

From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:jquery- [EMAIL PROTECTED] On

Behalf Of Matthias Coy

Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 10:10 AM

To: jquery-en@googlegroups.com

Subject: [jQuery] How to access href-property

Hi there,

how do I access the "href"-property of an anchor-element? I know there is a

$("#idOfAnAnchor").attr("href");

but this only gives me the attribute and not the property. I need the

property, because inside of this property is the full URL. See example:

<a id="idOfAnAnchor1" href="/index.php">Home</a> // on otherpage.com <a

id="idOfAnAnchor2" href="http://somepage.com/index.php";>Home</a>

$("#idOfAnAnchor1").attr("href"); // gives '/index.php', needed is

'http://otherpage.com/index.php'

$("#idOfAnAnchor2").attr("href"); // gives 'http://somepage.com/index.php'

I could use:

var aLink = document.getElementById("#idOfAnAnchor1");

var aHrefProperty = aLink.href;

but where is the jQuery fun in this :) ?

Regards

       Matthias



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