The short answer is: don't use jQuery .data() for dynamically set data attributes, unless you can guarantee that data attributes are always set by jQuery.
Either solution below will work:
- Use vanilla JS
.getAttribute()
instead
- Use jQuery
.attr()
instead
Here's the relevant part from the jQuery documentation (which I don't think really highlights how much this might surprise jQuery users):
The data- attributes are pulled in the first time the data property is accessed and then are no longer accessed or mutated (all data values are then stored internally in jQuery).
Regarding why you might not use jQuery to set attributes: many client side templating languages build DOM, including data attributes.
Given the dynamically built HTML (as shown in DevTools:
<form data-test="300" ...
DOM API tells the truth:
document.querySelector('form').getAttribute('data-test');
JQuery returns an out-of-date previous value (in this case, 19000):
$('form').data('test');
jQuery attr
returns the current value:
$('form').attr('data-amount');
Vanilla JS getAttribute()
returns the current value:
document.querySelector('form').getAttribute('data-amount');
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