I'm trying to get the children of the nth element returned by a jquery call. For example:
var kids = $('div')[7].children();
However, I keep getting this error with respect to children():
Uncaught TypeError: object is not a function
Can someone explain why this happens? children() works fine as long as I'm not calling it on an indexed element.
It's because it is no longer a jQuery object after you specify an index [7]. Thus, you are calling a jQuery method on a DOM element (which doesn't work).
You could use the .eq() method instead:
$('div').eq(7).children();
You could also use:
$($('div')[7]).children();
It's worth pointing out that this would work because the DOM element is wrapped in $() - thus turning it into a jQuery object.
You're using children method in javascript object i.e. $('div')[7]. To work with jquery method you need to use jquery object instead of javascript object.
Use eq method:
var kids = $('div').eq(7).children();
When you use array syntax with a jquery list you get back a document node, not a jquery element. Use $('div').eq(7).children() instead.
I'm having trouble getting to the source of this problem. Basically the error message I am getting in my console is:
TypeError: $(...).getElementsByTagName is not a function
When I click through to the line it is occuring on it is here:
var inputs = $('directoryresults').getElementsByTagName('input');
I'm not sure why this is happening as I have included jQuery in the header of the page itself:
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.11.0/jquery-ui.min.js"></script>
Does anyone have any ideas what might be causing this?
Does anyone have any ideas what might be causing this?
The object returned by the jQuery constructor doesn't have the .getElementsByTagName() method.
$('selector') returns a jQuery object. .getElementsByTagName() is a native JavaScript method of DOM elements.
To look for elements with a certain tagname using the jQuery object you currently have:
var inputs = $('directoryresults input');
// OR
var inputs = $('directoryresults').find('input');
To get a like-for-like node list that .getElementsByTagName() would return (note this isn't exactly the same, this will return an array where .getElementsByTagName() will return a HTMLCollection):
var inputs = $('directoryresults input').get();
Note: directoryresults, I am assuming, is either a class or id of a DOM element. Either way you'll want to amend the selector above
getElementsByTagName is a method you will find on Element and Document objects.
$('directoryresults') will return a jQuery object (containing any <directoryresult> elements … so nothing if you are working on an HTML document).
to use getElementsByTagName, you need to extract the elements from the jQuery object:
$('directoryresults')[0].getElementsByTagName
The above will only get the first element from the jQuery object (and it assumes that there will be at least one element) so you should probably replace the hard coded [0] with a for loop.
That said, you should generally use the find method instead:
$('directoryresults').find('input')
… or just use a descendant combinator in the first place:
$('directoryresults input')
As noted earlier, directoryresults won't find anything in a valid HTML document. You probably want to prefix it with . or # depending on what you are actually trying to match.
You are ussing a DOM API mixed with jQuery API sintax:
it's document.getElementsByTagName('input');
The first error is not specific if directoryresults is a class or an ID
Nor do you tell if a target item or the item you wish to call
If you use jQuery by TagName type this:
var inputs = $('input');
if you want put values in a div
$.each(inputs, function(){
$('div').append( $(this).val() );
});
I once saw a text about Jquery stating that in Jquery some properties have different names. I think it was the value property that is accessed in Jquery as val or something like that. Does JQuery do this a lot? Is a common practice of Jquery to change properties names?
jQuery does not change any property names.
jQuery implements it's own methods on jQuery objects. Those are completely separate from DOM properties or DOM methods.
For example, you can retrieve the value of any input control from a jQuery object using the .val() method. Internally, the .val() method on the jQuery object accesses the contents of the DOM object (perhaps using the .value property), but it is not replacing that DOM property in any way. It is still there is you choose to use it instead.
Similarly, jQuery has a .html() method that returns the innerHTML of an object. Again, this is jQuery method on a jQuery object and does not replace the DOM property innerHTML in any way.
Here are some code examples to illustrate:
<input id="test" type="text">
<div id="title">This is my Title</div>
Using plain javascript:
var text = document.getElementById("test").value;
var title = document.getElementById("title").innerHTML;
Using jQuery:
var text = $("#test").val();
var title = $("#title").html();
Notice that both the jQuery ways are method calls, not properties.
Even when using jQuery objects, you could get the DOM object out of the jQuery object using the .get(n) method and use the DOM property, though there usually isn't a reason to do so:
var text = $("#test").get(0).value;
var title = $("#title").get(0).innerHTML;
jQuery doesn't change property names. jQuery returns jQuery instances not dom elements.
If you do $thing[0].value it will work. If you do $thing.prop("value") it will work.
If you use $thing.val(); which is jQuery's val method (which is "kind" of like val but does a bunch of weird edge case magic as well) then it will "probably" return the value of the wrapped dom element.
Not that I'm aware of, the case of val is because it let's you set or get the value of all form fields (textfields, radio buttons, checkboxes, textareas, etc.) something that's not possibly simply by doing input.value in all cases.
In my javascript, I have a function which will return an element present in the HTML page .i have this stored in a variable and now want to do some kind of traversal in that using jquery methods like parent/fadeIn/fadeOut etc.
How can i do that.? My current code which returns the object is
var currentObject= GetThatObject();
Now i really want to play with this object like what we do with a typical jQuery object which we get like
var curObj=$("#tatElement")
You just do this:
var curObj = $(currentObject);
jQuery can take not only selector strings but HTML elements as arguments as well. It will just take that element, wrap it in its jQuery object and you can then use it the same way as if you had used a selector string. (It is actually a little more efficient because jQuery doesn't have to parse the selector and find the element).
Is this:
var contents = document.getElementById('contents');
The same as this:
var contents = $('#contents');
Given that jQuery is loaded?
Not exactly!!
document.getElementById('contents'); //returns a HTML DOM Object
var contents = $('#contents'); //returns a jQuery Object
In jQuery, to get the same result as document.getElementById, you can access the jQuery Object and get the first element in the object (Remember JavaScript objects act similar to associative arrays).
var contents = $('#contents')[0]; //returns a HTML DOM Object
No.
Calling document.getElementById('id') will return a raw DOM object.
Calling $('#id') will return a jQuery object that wraps the DOM object and provides jQuery methods.
Thus, you can only call jQuery methods like css() or animate() on the $() call.
You can also write $(document.getElementById('id')), which will return a jQuery object and is equivalent to $('#id').
You can get the underlying DOM object from a jQuery object by writing $('#id')[0].
Close, but not the same. They're getting the same element, but the jQuery version is wrapped in a jQuery object.
The equivalent would be this
var contents = $('#contents').get(0);
or this
var contents = $('#contents')[0];
These will pull the element out of the jQuery object.
A note on the difference in speed. Attach the following snipet to an onclick call:
function myfunc()
{
var timer = new Date();
for(var i = 0; i < 10000; i++)
{
//document.getElementById('myID');
$('#myID')[0];
}
console.log('timer: ' + (new Date() - timer));
}
Alternate commenting one out and then comment the other out. In my tests,
document.getElementbyId averaged about 35ms (fluctuating from 25ms up to 52ms on about 15 runs)
On the other hand, the
jQuery averaged about 200ms (ranging from 181ms to 222ms on about 15 runs).
From this simple test you can see that the jQuery took about 6 times as long.
Of course, that is over 10000 iterations so in a simpler situation I would probably use the jQuery for ease of use and all of the other cool things like .animate and .fadeTo. But yes, technically getElementById is quite a bit faster.
No. The first returns a DOM element, or null, whereas the second always returns a jQuery object. The jQuery object will be empty if no element with the id of contents was matched.
The DOM element returned by document.getElementById('contents') allows you to do things such as change the .innerHTML (or .value) etc, however you'll need to use jQuery methods on the jQuery Object.
var contents = $('#contents').get(0);
Is more equivilent, however if no element with the id of contents is matched, document.getElementById('contents') will return null, but $('#contents').get(0) will return undefined.
One benefit on using the jQuery object is that you won't get any errors if no elements were returned, as an object is always returned. However you will get errors if you try to perform operations on the null returned by document.getElementById
No, actually the same result would be:
$('#contents')[0]
jQuery does not know how many results would be returned from the query. What you get back is a special jQuery object which is a collection of all the controls that matched the query.
Part of what makes jQuery so convenient is that MOST methods called on this object that look like they are meant for one control, are actually in a loop called on all the members int he collection
When you use the [0] syntax you take the first element from the inner collection. At this point you get a DOM object
In case someone else hits this... Here's another difference:
If the id contains characters that are not supported by the HTML standard (see SO question here) then jQuery may not find it even if getElementById does.
This happened to me with an id containing "/" characters (ex: id="a/b/c"), using Chrome:
var contents = document.getElementById('a/b/c');
was able to find my element but:
var contents = $('#a/b/c');
did not.
Btw, the simple fix was to move that id to the name field. JQuery had no trouble finding the element using:
var contents = $('.myclass[name='a/b/c']);
var contents = document.getElementById('contents');
var contents = $('#contents');
The code snippets are not the same. first one returns a Element object (source).
The second one, jQuery equivalent will return a jQuery object containing a collection of either zero or one DOM element. (jQuery documentation). Internally jQuery uses document.getElementById() for efficiency.
In both the cases if more than one element found only the first element will be returned.
When checking the github project for jQuery I found following line snippets which seems to be using document.getElementById codes (https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/master/src/core/init.js line 68 onwards)
// HANDLE: $(#id)
} else {
elem = document.getElementById( match[2] );
Just like most people have said, the main difference is the fact that it is wrapped in a jQuery object with the jQuery call vs the raw DOM object using straight JavaScript. The jQuery object will be able to do other jQuery functions with it of course but, if you just need to do simple DOM manipulation like basic styling or basic event handling, the straight JavaScript method is always a tad bit faster than jQuery since you don't have to load in an external library of code built on JavaScript. It saves an extra step.
One other difference: getElementById returns the first match, while $('#...') returns a collection of matches - yes, the same ID can be repeated in an HTML doc.
Further, getElementId is called from the document, while $('#...') can be called from a selector. So, in the code below, document.getElementById('content') will return the entire body but $('form #content')[0] will return inside of the form.
<body id="content">
<h1>Header!</h1>
<form>
<div id="content"> My Form </div>
</form>
</body>
It might seem odd to use duplicate IDs, but if you are using something like Wordpress, a template or plugin might use the same id as you use in the content. The selectivity of jQuery could help you out there.
All the answers are old today as of 2019 you can directly access id keyed filds in javascript simply try it
<p id="mytext"></p>
<script>mytext.innerText = 'Yes that works!'</script>
Online Demo!
- https://codepen.io/frank-dspeed/pen/mdywbre
jQuery is built over JavaScript. This means that it's just javascript anyway.
document.getElementById()
The document.getElementById() method returns the element that has the ID attribute with the specified value and Returns null if no elements with the specified ID exists.An ID should be unique within a page.
Jquery $()
Calling jQuery() or $() with an id selector as its argument will return a jQuery object containing a collection of either zero or one DOM element.Each id value must be used only once within a document. If more than one element has been assigned the same ID, queries that use that ID will only select the first matched element in the DOM.
All the answers above are correct. In case you want to see it in action, don't forget you have Console in a browser where you can see the actual result crystal clear :
I have an HTML :
<div id="contents"></div>
Go to console (cntrl+shift+c) and use these commands to see your result clearly
document.getElementById('contents')
>>> div#contents
$('#contents')
>>> [div#contents,
context: document,
selector: "#contents",
jquery: "1.10.1",
constructor: function,
init: function …]
As we can see, in the first case we got the tag itself (that is, strictly speaking, an HTMLDivElement object). In the latter we actually don’t have a plain object, but an array of objects. And as mentioned by other answers above, you can use the following command:
$('#contents')[0]
>>> div#contents