I am trying to do the following: 1) create an IMG 2) assign an SRC to the IMG 3) wrap the IMG in <br/>'s 4) insert the resultant HTML into #foo
I have been hammering at this for awhile now, and am having problems; I've tried using wrap and some of the other content-manipulation methods, but I still can't get the implementation down to something short and sweet (referencing jQuery only once). This is the best I've got so far: var html = jQuery( '<br/><img/><br/>' ) .find( 'img' ).attr( 'src', 'image.gif' ).end(); jQuery( '#foo' ).html( html ); I realize that I could use the literal expression in place of the "html" variable, but that's no better IMO. What I originally started out doing, was something like this: jQuery( '<img/>' ).attr( 'src', 'image.gif' ).wrap( '<br/><br/>' ).replaceAll( '#foo' ); But, replaceAll removes the node (I only want to change its contents). What I've noticed, is that the jQuery API provides alternative forms of 3 methods (that I don't see used very often): append, prepend, and replace. These 3 support both of the followng forms, and I believe they are 100% interchangeable: jQuery( selector ).method( html ); jQuery( html ).methodTo( selector ); However, .html(), which is arguably more popular, only has the 1st form, but not the second. Is there an alternative form for html() that I'm missing, or is this a hole in the API that apparently isn't wanted? Thanks in advance!