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Find text string using jQuery?

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How do I find a string in a string?

You can use contains(), indexOf() and lastIndexOf() method to check if one String contains another String in Java or not. If a String contains another String then it's known as a substring. The indexOf() method accepts a String and returns the starting position of the string if it exists, otherwise, it will return -1.

How do you check if a variable contains a string in jQuery?

You can check using Javascript . IndexOf() if a string contains substring or not, it returns Index of substring if it is in a string otherwise it returns 0. console.

How do I get inner text in jQuery?

Answer: Use the jQuery text() method You can simply use the jQuery text() method to get all the text content inside an element. The text() method also return the text content of child elements.

How use contains in jQuery?

jQuery :contains() SelectorThe :contains() selector selects elements containing the specified string. The string can be contained directly in the element as text, or in a child element. This is mostly used together with another selector to select the elements containing the text in a group (like in the example above).


jQuery has the contains method. Here's a snippet for you:

<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
    var foundin = $('*:contains("I am a simple string")');
});
</script>

The selector above selects any element that contains the target string. The foundin will be a jQuery object that contains any matched element. See the API information at: https://api.jquery.com/contains-selector/

One thing to note with the '*' wildcard is that you'll get all elements, including your html an body elements, which you probably don't want. That's why most of the examples at jQuery and other places use $('div:contains("I am a simple string")')


Normally jQuery selectors do not search within the "text nodes" in the DOM. However if you use the .contents() function, text nodes will be included, then you can use the nodeType property to filter only the text nodes, and the nodeValue property to search the text string.

    $('*', 'body')
        .andSelf()
        .contents()
        .filter(function(){
            return this.nodeType === 3;
        })
        .filter(function(){
            // Only match when contains 'simple string' anywhere in the text
            return this.nodeValue.indexOf('simple string') != -1;
        })
        .each(function(){
            // Do something with this.nodeValue
        });

This will select just the leaf elements that contain "I am a simple string".

$('*:contains("I am a simple string")').each(function(){
     if($(this).children().length < 1) 
          $(this).css("border","solid 2px red") });

Paste the following into the address bar to test it.

javascript: $('*:contains("I am a simple string")').each(function(){ if($(this).children().length < 1) $(this).css("border","solid 2px red") }); return false;

If you want to grab just "I am a simple string". First wrap the text in an element like so.

$('*:contains("I am a simple string")').each(function(){
     if($(this).children().length < 1) 
          $(this).html( 
               $(this).text().replace(
                    /"I am a simple string"/
                    ,'<span containsStringImLookingFor="true">"I am a simple string"</span>' 
               )  
           ) 
});

and then do this.

$('*[containsStringImLookingFor]').css("border","solid 2px red");

If you just want the node closest to the text you're searching for, you could use this:

$('*:contains("my text"):last');

This will even work if your HTML looks like this:

<p> blah blah <strong>my <em>text</em></strong></p>

Using the above selector will find the <strong> tag, since that's the last tag which contains that entire string.


Take a look at highlight (jQuery plugin).


Just adding to Tony Miller's answer as this got me 90% towards what I was looking for but still didn't work. Adding .length > 0; to the end of his code got my script working.

 $(function() {
    var foundin = $('*:contains("I am a simple string")').length > 0;
 });

this function should work. basically does a recursive lookup till we get a distinct list of leaf nodes.

function distinctNodes(search, element) {
    var d, e, ef;
    e = [];
    ef = [];

    if (element) {
        d = $(":contains(\""+ search + "\"):not(script)", element);
    }
    else {
            d = $(":contains(\""+ search + "\"):not(script)");
    }

    if (d.length == 1) {
            e.push(d[0]);
    }
    else {
        d.each(function () {
            var i, r = distinctNodes(search, this);
            if (r.length === 0) {
                e.push(this);
            }
            else {
                for (i = 0; i < r.length; ++i) {
                    e.push(r[i]);
                }
            }
        });
    }
    $.each(e, function () {
        for (var i = 0; i < ef.length; ++i) {
            if (this === ef[i]) return;
        }
        ef.push(this);
    });
    return ef;
}