23

For example

For each div in body
          div.innerHtml = "poo"
next div

this is obviously psuedo code but demonstrates what i am trying to do.


Edit to share that it gives me tremendous joy to look at questions 9-years old and to see how far I've come and that this question still benefits others.

0

5 Answers 5

43
var elements = document.getElementsByTagName('div');

for (var i = 0; i < elements.length; i++) {
    elements[i].innerHTML = "foo";
}​

Live DEMO

If you want to look only in the <body>:

var elements = document.body.getElementsByTagName('div');

for (var i = 0; i < elements.length; i++) {
    elements[i].innerHTML = "foo";
}​
1
  • 2
    document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0] === document.body ;)
    – user1106925
    Jun 9, 2012 at 20:15
41

NodeList.forEach Chrome  icon Firefox icon Edge    icon Opera   icon Safari  icon10

querySelectorAll returns a static non-live NodeList exposing a forEach method:

const elements = document.querySelectorAll('div');

elements.forEach( el => {
  el.innerHTML = "foo";
});

Document.querySelectorAllMDN
NodeList.prototype.forEach()MDN


Array.from Chrome  icon Firefox icon Edge    icon Opera   icon Safari  icon9

const elements = document.querySelectorAll('div');

Array.from(elements).forEach( (el) => {
  el.innerHTML = "foo";
});

Array.from()MDN


Array Destructuring Chrome  icon Firefox icon Edge    icon Opera   icon Safari  icon9

const elements = document.querySelectorAll('div');

[...elements].forEach( el => {
  el.innerHTML = "foo";
});

Destructuring assignmentMDN
Document.querySelectorAll()MDN


Array forEach.call Chrome  icon Firefox icon Edge    icon IExplor icon9 Opera   icon Safari  icon

var elements = document.querySelectorAll('div');

[].forEach.call(elements, function( el ) {
  el.innerHTML = "foo";
});

Array.prototype.forEach()MDN


For loop

var elements = document.getElementsByTagName('div');

for (var i=0; i<elements.length; i++) {
  elements[i].innerHTML = "foo";
}

Element.getElementsByTagName()MDN

5

Easy job:

NodeList.prototype.forEach = HTMLCollection.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;

And now:

// VanillaJS / JavaScript puro
var lista_de_divs = document.querySelectorAll('div')
lista_de_divs.forEach(function (div, i) {
    // código...
    console.log(i, div)
})


// jQuery
$('div').forEach(function (div, i) {
    // código...
    console.log(i, div)
})
3

For ES6

let elements = document.body.getElementsByTagName('div');

Array.prototype.forEach.call(elements, e => {
  e.innerHTML = "foo";
});
1

An alternate version with the new Array.from() method and arrow functions in ES2015:

Array.from(document.body.getElementsByTagName("div")).forEach(a=>a.innerHTML='foo');
<div></div>
<div></div>
<div>Test</div>
<div></div>
<div>Hello</div>
<div>World</div>

If size is absolutely crucial for you, then this solution is only 84 bytes, compared to 113 for @Roko's answer and 120 for @gdoron's.

In that case, jQuery could shorten this far more:

$("body div").html('foo');
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<div></div>
<div></div>
<div>Test</div>
<div></div>
<div>Hello</div>
<div>World</div>

Now only 26 bytes!

1
  • 2
    Interesting examples, but you cannot talk about size and jQuery cause it's a library on top of JS and has it's size on it's own. Thumbs up for the JS version BTW (even though I'd use querySelectorAll ;) Sep 24, 2016 at 1:45

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