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Home/ Questions/Q 618391
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T18:32:25+00:00 2026-05-13T18:32:25+00:00

So, in my example below, InputDate’ is an input type=text, DateColumn is a TD

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So, in my example below, “InputDate'” is an input type=text, “DateColumn” is a TD within a table with a class of “DateColumn”.

Read the value of a discreet texbox:

var inputVal = $('#InputDate').val();

Read the value of a div within a table….

This works:

$('#theTable .DateColumn').each(function() {
  var rowDate = Date.parse($(this)[0].innerHTML);
});

This doesn’t:

$('#theTable .DateColumn').each(function() {
  var rowDate = Date.parse($(this)[0].innerHTML());
});

The difference is the “()” after innerHTML. This behavior seems syntactically inconsistent between how you read a value from a textbox and how you read it from a div. I’m ok with sometimes, depending on the type of control, having to read .val vs .innerHTML vs.whateverElseDependingOnTheTypeOfControl…but this example leads me to believe I now must also memorize whether I need trailing brackets or not on each property/method.

So for a person like me who is relatively new to jQuery/Javascript….I seem to have figured out this particular anomaly, in this instance, but is there a convention I am missing out on, or does a person have to literally have to memorize whether each method does or does not need brackets?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T18:32:26+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:32 pm

    innerHTML is javascript, and is a property of an element. If you’d like to stick with the jQuery version of doing things, use html():

    $('#theTable .DateColumn').each(function() {
      var rowDate = Date.parse($(this).html() );
    });
    

    edit: a bit more clarification about your concerns. jQuery is pretty consistent in it’s syntax. Basically, most of the methods you find allow read/write access by adjusting the parameters passed to the method.

    var css = $('#element').css('color'); // read the color of the element
    $('#element').css('color', 'red'); // set the color to "red"
    
    var contents = $('#element').html(); // grab the innerHTML of the element
    $('#element').html('Hello World'); // set the innerHTML of this element
    
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