You are applying the function to the whole heading's innerHTML
, which includes the anchor's href
attribute. This should work for your fiddle example:
$('h1 a, h2 a, h3 a, h4 a').ligature( //...
However, it will only work on links inside the headings, and I'm not sure that's what you're looking for. If you want something that works for any contents inside a certain element (with any level of tag nesting), then you'll need a recursive approach. Here is an idea, which is basically plain JavaScript since jQuery does not provide a way to target DOM text nodes:
$.fn.ligature = function(str, lig) {
return this.each(function() {
recursiveLigatures(this, lig);
});
function recursiveLigatures(el, lig) {
if(el.childNodes.length) {
for(var i=0, len=el.childNodes.length; i<len; i++) {
if(el.childNodes[i].childNodes.length > 0) {
recursiveLigatures(el.childNodes[i], lig);
} else {
el.childNodes[i].nodeValue = htmlDecode(el.childNodes[i].nodeValue.replace(new RegExp(str, 'g'), lig));
}
}
} else {
el.nodeValue = htmlDecode(el.nodeValue.replace(new RegExp(str, 'g'), lig));
}
}
// http://stackoverflow.com/a/1912522/825789
function htmlDecode(input){
var e = document.createElement('div');
e.innerHTML = input;
return e.childNodes.length === 0 ? "" : e.childNodes[0].nodeValue;
}
};
// call this from the document.ready handler
$(function(){
$('h3').ligature('ffi', 'ffi')
.ligature('ffl', 'ffl')
.ligature('ff', 'ff')
.ligature('fi', 'fi')
.ligature('fl', 'fl');
});
That should work on contents like this:
<h3>
mixed ffi content
<span>this is another tag ffi <span>(and this is nested ffi</span></span>
<a href="/news/here-is-a-url-with-ffi-ligature">Here is a ffi ligature</a>
</h3>
http://jsfiddle.net/JjLZR/