My code should insert HTML content in all divs that have a predefined class name, without using jQuery and at least compatible with IE8 (so no getElementsbyClass).
The html:
<div class="target">1</div>
<div class="target">2</div>
<div class="target">3</div>
<div class="target">4</div>
The javascript:
var elems = document.getElementsByTagName('*'), i;
for (wwi in elems) {
if((' ' + elems[wwi].className + ' ').indexOf(' ' + "target" + ' ') > -1) {
elems[wwi].innerHTML = "YES";
//elems[wwi].innerHTML = "<div>YES!</div>";
}
}
You can try it here.
As you can see inside each div the word YES is printed. Well the if you comment elems[wwi].innerHTML = "YES";
and replace that for elems[wwi].innerHTML = "<div>YES!</div>"
the code fails. I suppose is because inserting div elements modify the DOM and in consequence the FOR cycle fails. Am i right?
Well i can solve this pretty ugly by recalling the for cycle each time i make an innerHTML, and when i insert the code i can add a class (like data-codeAlreadyInserted=1) to ignore the next time the FOR pass in that div. But again, this is pretty much a very bad solution since for an average site with many tags I can even freeze the user browser.
What do you think? lets suppose i dont know the amount of tags i insert on each innerHTML call.