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I was working on a short script to change <abbr>
elements' inner text, but found that nodelist
does not have a forEach
method. I know that nodelist
doesn't inherit from Array
, but doesn't it seem like forEach
would be a useful method to have? Is there a particular implementation issue I am not aware of that prevents adding forEach
to nodelist
?
Note: I am aware that Dojo and jQuery both have forEach
in some form for their nodelists. I cannot use either due to limitations.
I was working on a short script to change <abbr>
elements' inner text, but found that nodelist
does not have a forEach
method. I know that nodelist
doesn't inherit from Array
, but doesn't it seem like forEach
would be a useful method to have? Is there a particular implementation issue I am not aware of that prevents adding forEach
to nodelist
?
Note: I am aware that Dojo and jQuery both have forEach
in some form for their nodelists. I cannot use either due to limitations.
11 Answers
Reset to default 112NodeList now has forEach() in all major browsers
See nodeList forEach() on MDN.
Original answer
None of these answers explain why NodeList doesn't inherit from Array, thus allowing it to have forEach
and all the rest.
The answer is found on this es-discuss thread. In short, it breaks the web:
The problem was code that incorrectly assumed instanceof to mean that the instance was an Array in combination with Array.prototype.concat.
There was a bug in Google's Closure Library which caused almost all Google's apps to fail due to this. The library was updated as soon as this was found but there might still be code out there that makes the same incorrect assumption in combination with concat.
That is, some code did something like
if (x instanceof Array) {
otherArray.concat(x);
} else {
doSomethingElseWith(x);
}
However, concat
will treat "real" arrays (not instanceof Array) differently from other objects:
[1, 2, 3].concat([4, 5, 6]) // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
[1, 2, 3].concat(4) // [1, 2, 3, 4]
so that means that the above code broke when x
was a NodeList, because before it went down the doSomethingElseWith(x)
path, whereas afterward it went down the otherArray.concat(x)
path, which did something weird since x
wasn't a real array.
For some time there was a proposal for an Elements
class that was a real subclass of Array, and would be used as "the new NodeList". However, that was removed from the DOM Standard, at least for now, since it wasn't feasible to implement yet for a variety of technical and specification-related reasons.
You can do
Array.prototype.forEach.call (nodeList, function (node) {
// Your code here.
} );
You can consider creating a new array of nodes.
var nodeList = document.getElementsByTagName('div'),
nodes = Array.prototype.slice.call(nodeList,0);
// nodes is an array now.
nodes.forEach(function(node){
// do your stuff here.
});
Note: This is just a list/array of node references we are creating here, no duplicate nodes.
nodes[0] === nodeList[0] // will be true
Never say never, it's 2016 and the NodeList
object has implemented a forEach
method in latest chrome (v52.0.2743.116).
It's too early to use it in production as other browser don't support this yet (tested FF 49) but I would guess that this will be standardized soon.
In short, its a design conflict to implement that method.
From MDN:
Why can't I use forEach or map on a NodeList?
NodeList are used very much like arrays and it would be tempting to use Array.prototype methods on them. This is, however, impossible.
JavaScript has an inheritance mechanism based on prototypes. Array instances inherit array methods (such as forEach or map) because their prototype chain looks like the following:
myArray --> Array.prototype --> Object.prototype --> null
(the prototype chain of an object can be obtained by calling several times Object.getPrototypeOf)forEach, map and the likes are own properties of the Array.prototype object.
Unlike arrays, NodeList prototype chain looks like the following:
myNodeList --> NodeList.prototype --> Object.prototype --> null
NodeList.prototype contains the item method, but none of the Array.prototype methods, so they cannot be used on NodeLists.
Source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/NodeList (scroll down to Why can't I use forEach or map on a NodeList?)
If you would like using forEach on NodeList, just copy that function from Array:
NodeList.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
Thats all, now you can use it at the same manner you would for Array:
document.querySelectorAll('td').forEach(function(o){
o.innerHTML = 'text';
});
In ES2015, you can now use forEach
method to the nodeList.
document.querySelectorAll('abbr').forEach( el => console.log(el));
See The MDN Link
However if you want to use HTML Collections or other array-like objects, in es2015, you can use Array.from()
method. This method takes an array-like or iterable object (including nodeList, HTML Collections, strings etc) and returns a new Array instance. You can use it like this:
const elements = document.getElementsByTagName('abbr');
Array.from(elements).forEach( el => console.log(el));
As Array.from()
method is shimmable, you can use it in es5 code like this
var elements = document.getElementsByTagName('abbr');
Array.from(elements).forEach( function(el) {
console.log(el);
});
For details, see the MDN page.
To check current browser support.
OR
another es2015 way is to use spread operator.
[...document.querySelectorAll('abbr')].forEach( el => console.log(el));
MDN spread operator
Spread Operator - Browser Support
My solution:
//foreach for nodeList
NodeList.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
//foreach for HTML collection(getElementsByClassName etc.)
HTMLCollection.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
You can add forEach polyfill for old browsers just one line of code:
window.NodeList && !NodeList.prototype.forEach && (NodeList.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach);
https://udn.realityripple.com/docs/Web/API/NodeList/forEach
NodeList is part of the DOM API. Look at the ECMAScript bindings which apply to JavaScript as well. http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/ecma-script-binding.html. The nodeList and a read-only length property and item(index) function to return a node.
The answer is, you have to iterate. There is no alternative. Foreach will not work. I work with Java DOM API bindings and have the same problem.
Check MDN for NodeList.forEach specification.
NodeList.forEach(function(item, index, nodeList) {
// code block here
});
In IE, use akuhn's answer:
[].forEach.call(NodeList, function(item, index, array) {
// code block here
});
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