问题
I'm generating content dynamically, so I'm often ending up with documentFragments
which I'm querying using querySelectorAll
or querySelector
returning a nodeList
of elements inside my documentFragment.
From time to time I would like to add an item to a list, but I can't find anything online on whether this is even possible.
I tried it like this:
document.querySelectorAll(".translate").item(length+1) = document.createElement("div");
and this:
document.querySelectorAll(".translate").shift(document.createElement("div"));
But both don't work (as expected)
Question:
Is it possible to manually add elements to a NodeList? I guess, not but asking nevertheless.
Thanks for some insights?
EDIT:
So more info: I'm generating a block of dynamic content, which I want to append to my page. By default the block is in English. Since the user is viewing the page in Chinese, I'm running a translator on the dynamic fragment, BEFORE appending it to the DOM. On my page, I also have an element, say a title, which should change depending on the dynamic content being added. My idea was to do this in one step = try to add an element to my nodeList
. But from writing it now... I guess not possible :-)
回答1:
EDIT: As @Sniffer mentioned, NodeLists are read-only (both the length property and the items). You can manipulate everything else about them, like shown below, but it's probably better to convert them to arrays instead if you want to manipulate them.
var list = document.querySelectorAll('div');
var spans = document.querySelectorAll('span');
push(list, spans);
forEach(list, console.log); // all divs and spans on the page
function push(list, items) {
Array.prototype.push.apply(list, items);
list.length_ = list.length;
list.length_ += items.length;
}
function forEach(list, callback) {
for (var i=0; i<list.length_; i++) {
callback(list[i]);
}
}
It would probably be a better idea to turn the NodeList to an array instead (list = Array.prototype.slice(list)
).
var list = Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('div'));
var spans = Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('span'));
list.push.apply(list, spans);
console.log(list); // array with all divs and spans on page
回答2:
Unlike previously described element selection methods, the NodeList returned by querySelectorAll()is not live: it holds the elements that match the selector at the time the method was invoked, but it does not update as the document changes. [1]
The NodeList
in this case is not alive, so if you add/remove anything to/from it, then it won't have any effect on the document structure.
A NodeList is a read-only array-like object. [1]
[1]: JavaScript: The Definitive Guid, David Flanagan
回答3:
I have another suggestion. you can select multiple nodes with multiple select conditions by using ,
like:
nodes = document.querySelectorAll('h2, h3');
This code selects all h2
and h3
saved in nodes
.
回答4:
To not get into technicalities with array methods it can sometimes be more readable to make a list of node names and loop over the list.
In this example I assign the same event handler to all buttons in two different radio button groups (where each button in the group has the same name):
<div>
<input type="radio" name="acmode" value="1" checked="checked">Phase<br>
<input type="radio" name="acmode" value="2">Ssr<br>
<input type="radio" name="acmode" value="3">Relay<br>
</div>
<div>
<input type="radio" name="powermode" value="0" checked="checked">Manual<br>
<input type="radio" name="powermode" value="1">Automatic<br>
</div>
Sample event handler:
var evtRbtnHandler =
function rbtnHandler() {
document.getElementById("response11").innerHTML = this.name + ": " + this.value;
}
And assigning:
var buttongroup = ["acmode", "powermode"];
buttongroup.forEach(function (name) {
document.getElementsByName(name).forEach(function (elem) {
elem.onclick = evtRbtnHandler;
});
});
In any case once you get your hands on each single item it can be pushed() to an array using human readable code.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20075234/is-it-possible-to-append-an-element-to-a-javascript-nodelist