Name
Node
Subclasses
Attr, Comment, Document, DocumentFragment, Element, Text
Constants
All nodes in an HTML document are instances of one of the Node
subclasses listed above. Every Node object has a nodeType
property that specifies which of
the subclasses it is an instance of. The following constants are the
legal values for nodeType
. Note
that these are static properties of Node
, not properties of individual Node
objects. They are not defined in Internet Explorer 4, 5, or 6; in
those browsers you must use the corresponding integer literals.
Node.ELEMENT_NODE = 1; // Element Node.ATTRIBUTE_NODE = 2; // Attr Node.TEXT_NODE = 3; // Text Node.COMMENT_NODE = 8; // Comment Node.DOCUMENT_NODE = 9; // Document Node.DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT_NODE=11; // DocumentFragment
Properties
attributes[ ]
If this Node is an Element, the
attributes
property is a read-only array of Attr objects that represent the attributes of the element. The array can be indexed by number or by attribute name. All HTML attributes have corresponding Element properties, however, so it is uncommon to use theattributes[ ]
array.childNodes[ ]
This read-only array of Node objects contains the children of this node. If the node has no children, this property is a zero-length array.
firstChild
This read-only property refers to the first child Node of this node, or
null
if the node has no children.lastChild
This read-only property refers to the last child Node of this node, or
null
if the node has no children.nextSibling
The sibling Node that ...
Get JavaScript Pocket Reference, 2nd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.