It is not on the same domain...sorry the posting seems a bit screwy...posts took forever to show up etc...
Anyways, it is not on the same domain, but oddly enough if I move the call to a different server (not the same domain) it doesn't have a problem. The domain that it can't load from is on a windows godaddy account....the other domain which it could pull from is a dedicated linux host. If you don't mind, why would we have to use JSONP ? And do you have an example? Thanks, JM On Mar 1, 9:32 pm, Ami <aminad...@gmail.com> wrote: > If it's not on the same domain you must use JSONP. > > On Mar 2, 7:27 am, mkmanning <michaell...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I'll go ahead and ask this here as well: is 'http://test.com/ > > remote.html' in the same domain? > > > On Mar 1, 8:55 pm, Ami <aminad...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Try to put <div> between <td> and #myelemnt > > > > <table> > > > <tr><td><div><div id=myelement> </div></div></td></tr> > > > </table> > > > > Aminadav > > > On Mar 2, 4:15 am, joshm <joshmat...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Can someone explain how to do this, I'm trying to load the parent of > > > > an element (which will be a <td> cell) and then load the <td> with the > > > > html from a remote file kind of like so: > > > > > var parent = $('#myelement').parent().load('http://test.com/ > > > > remote.html'); > > > > > I have tried several other variations and the load always fails...no > > > > error messages, just doesn't seem to like it. It may have something > > > > to do with it still being a jquery object perhaps?