I'm trying to implement a highlighting feature for a livesearch.
What I do is, send an ajax request with an token the user looks for. I receive an html text containing a table.
So I thought I could use a simple regex, looking for the users token and then surround it with a span, but I am receiving some longfilled <a>
- Tags, so chances are good that the user types something and I break my HTML by replacing something inside a tag.
So how can I exclude html tags in my search?
Oh I'm using javascript regexp.
I'm trying to implement a highlighting feature for a livesearch.
What I do is, send an ajax request with an token the user looks for. I receive an html text containing a table.
So I thought I could use a simple regex, looking for the users token and then surround it with a span, but I am receiving some longfilled <a>
- Tags, so chances are good that the user types something and I break my HTML by replacing something inside a tag.
So how can I exclude html tags in my search?
Oh I'm using javascript regexp.
Share Improve this question edited May 22, 2018 at 17:31 Ωmega 43.7k35 gold badges142 silver badges212 bronze badges asked Apr 20, 2012 at 13:36 Johannes KlaußJohannes Klauß 11.1k18 gold badges71 silver badges127 bronze badges3 Answers
Reset to default 5You would need to load jQuery highlight plugin and then you can just do something like this:
var words = "keyword1,keyword2,keyword3";
var keywords = words.split(',');
for(var i = 0; i < keywords.length; i++) {
$(selector).highlight($.trim(keywords[i]));
}
If you wanna do highlighting in the entire page, then replace selector
with 'body'
, otherwise use selector for desired element.
//These results to be highlighted
var results = [];
results[0] = 'jquery';
results[1] = 'json';
results[2] = 'Java Script';
results[3] = 'java';
results[4] = 'java Update';
results[5] = 'javelin';
results[6] = 'James';
results[7] = 'jacob';
results[8] = 'Jail';
results[9] = 'Jailor';
jQuery(document).ready(function(){
//Search the results
jQuery('#search').live('keyup', function(event){
var term = jQuery(this).val();//keyword to be matched
var htm = '';
//Keys with codes 40 and below are special (enter, arrow keys, escape, etc.), Key code 8 is backspace.
if(event.keyCode > 40 || event.keyCode <91 || event.keyCode == 8 ||
event.keyCode == 20 || event.keyCode == 16 || event.keyCode == 9 ||
event.keyCode == 37 || event.keyCode == 38 || event.keyCode == 39 ||
event.keyCode == 40) {
for(x in results){
var match = results[x];
if(match.toLowerCase().indexOf(term.toLowerCase()) != -1){
var o = '<b><u>'+term+'</u></b>';
var a = match.replace(term, o);
htm += '<li>'+a+'</li>';
}
}
//create a orderd list for the matched results
var output = '<ol>' + htm + '</ol>';
if (htm.length > 0) {
jQuery('#result').show().append(output);
}
}
});
});
The plete tutorial can be found here: http://www.webspeaks.in/2012/09/live-text-search-highlight-using.html
Not sure how well the jQuery plugin works, here is the script I came up with but doesn't highlight text over multiple tags. If I want to highlight "my script" and the html looks like "my script" then it would not be highlighted. Still working on that part.
Here is the script so far:
str='<img src="brown fox.jpg" title="The brown fox" />'
+'<p>some text containing fox. And onother fox.</p>'
var word="fox";
word="(\\b"+
word.replace(/([{}()[\]\\.?*+^$|=!:~-])/g, "\\$1")
+ "\\b)";
var r = new RegExp(word,"igm")
str.replace(/(>[^<]+)/igm,function(a){
return a.replace(r,"<span class='hl'>$1</span>");
})