Seems like a simple thing to do (although im still learning the ins and outs of jQuery).
Here's my HTML:
<div id="fbsignup">
<div class="message messageerror">
<strong>There were errors with your registration:</strong>
<ul></ul>
</div>
</div>
Here's my (attempted) jQuery:
// Check Required Fields.
$('#fbsignup input.required').each(function () {
if ($(this).val().trim() == '') {
$(this).next('em').html('*').show();
$('#fbsignup .message ul').add('li').html('Fields marked with * are required.');
}
});
And this is what it is doing to the DOM:
<div class="message messageerror">
<strong>There were errors with your registration:</strong>
<ul>Fields marked with * are required.</ul>
</div>
It's adding the text to the inner html. I want it to add a <li>
element with the inner html of what i set - i thought this is how chaining works?
This is the HTML i want to end up with:
<div class="message messageerror">
<strong>There were errors with your registration:</strong>
<ul>
<li>Fields marked with * are required.</li>
</ul>
</div>
I also tried this:
$('#fbsignup .message ul').add('<li>Fields marked with * are required.</li>');
Which does absolutely nothing.
What am i missing? Is the .add
function not the right thing to use here?
You want to use
.appendTo(...)
for this style.$("<li/>").appendTo("#fbsignup .message ul").html("Fields marked with * are required.");
Try it.
Try
$('#fbsignup .message ul li').add
The problem for me seems to be that you are using a function called .add()
and I don't think there is such function-wrong.Likely you can use .append() to do your will http://api.jquery.com/?ns0=1&s=append =)
A good general rule for me is to try stuff beforehand on the Firebug console (over FireFox)