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Home/ Questions/Q 897509
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T14:53:53+00:00 2026-05-15T14:53:53+00:00

I’ve been trying a new way to set up a website using jQuery to

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I’ve been trying a new way to set up a website using jQuery to dynamically get the content when a link is clicked. Here is the jQuery code:

$(document).ready(function() {

 var content_loader = $('#content-loader');

 $('#nav ul li a').click(function () {
  $(this).closest('ul').find('li.active').removeClass('active');
  $(this).parent().addClass('active');
  content_loader.load('content/' + $(this).attr('data-name') + '.html'); 
  });

 content_loader.load('content/home.html');

});

I’ve been doing it this way since I have a song in the background of my site that I want to play all the time and not start over every time a link is clicked.

The whole thing works pretty good, except for 2 issues I’m having.

  1. Let’s say I click the contact us link. I would now see #contactus at the end of the url. If I then refresh the page, I see my home page content again.
  2. Same problem if I try linking someone to my contact us page.

I was wondering if jQuery can somehow find out what comes after the # sign in the url. In that case, I can change the last line of my jQuery code to load that instead of the home data all the time.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T14:53:53+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 2:53 pm

    window.location.hash will contain the value after the hash (if there is one). (This is when there’s a hash in the current url, eg. current page, in the browser’s address bar.)

    Otherwise, if you’re reading a link from an href, you’ll need to use indexOf('#') and a bit of parsing.

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