vote up 1 vote down star

Say,is the following possible:

textNode.appendChild(elementNode);

elementNode refers to those with nodeType=1

textNode refers to those with nodeType=2

It's not easy to produce.

The reason I ask this is that I find a function that adds a cite link to the end of a quotation:

function displayCitations() {
  var quotes = document.getElementsByTagName("blockquote");
  for (var i=0; i<quotes.length; i++) {
  if (!quotes[i].getAttribute("cite")) continue;
  var url = quotes[i].getAttribute("cite");
  var quoteChildren = quotes[i].getElementsByTagName('*');
  if (quoteChildren.length < 1) continue;
  var elem = quoteChildren[quoteChildren.length - 1];
  var link = document.createElement("a");
  var link_text = document.createTextNode("source");
  link.appendChild(link_text);
  link.setAttribute("href",url);
  var superscript = document.createElement("sup");
  superscript.appendChild(link);
  elem.appendChild(superscript);
  }
}

see the last line "elem.appendChild(superscript);" where elem can be a textNode?

I think the reason it's difficult to prove it because it's hard to get access to a specified textNode.Have anyone any way to achieve that?

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40% accept rate
No - in this example elem cannot be a textNode. the array quoteChildren is populated via HTMLElement.getElementsByTagName() which doesn't return text nodes. And elem is the last value in quoteChildren – Peter Bailey Jul 10 at 19:00
Right,I've found my mistake.But the question still deserves a answer,right?Have you tried to append an elementNode to a textNode? – Shore Jul 10 at 19:03
Yup, never had before but it was trivial to exercise. Check my answer below. – Peter Bailey Jul 10 at 19:06

3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

No, text nodes are always leafs. Instead you must add new nodes to the text node's parent - making them siblings of the text node.

EDIT

Here's an example where I attempt to add a child to a text node.

<div id="test">my only child is this text node</div>

<script type="text/javascript">

var div = document.getElementById( 'test' );
var textNode = div.childNodes[0];
var superscript = document.createElement("sup");
superscript.text = 'test';

textNode.appendChild( superscript );

</script>

Firefox gives the error

uncaught exception: Node cannot be inserted at the specified point in the hierarchy (NS_ERROR_DOM_HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR)

link|flag
The conclusion conflicts with code in <Web.Design.with.JavaScript.and.the.Document.Object.Model.2005> – Shore Jul 10 at 18:49
I'm not sure what you're referencing in your comment, but I added a snippet to backup my statement. – Peter Bailey Jul 10 at 19:05
thanks a lot,Peter:) – Shore Jul 10 at 19:07
BTW,what does IE report? – Shore Jul 10 at 19:07
Well, IE's javascript errors are rarely useful, and this case is no exception. "Unexpected call to method or property access". It does report the correct line number, though. – Peter Bailey Jul 10 at 19:13
vote up 3 vote down

I don't think so; I'm fairly certain that something like

<div>this is some <a href="...">text</a> with an element inside it.</div>

ends up being:

<div>
    <textnode/>
    <a>
        <textnode/>
    </a>
    <textnode/>
</div>

I don't believe textNodes can have children.

If I had to guess, I'd think that the result of adding a child node to a text node would be to add the element to the text node's parent instead, but I've not tested that at all.

link|flag
Correct. The element is a sibling of the text nodes, not a child. – GalacticCowboy Jul 10 at 18:42
then the above code is wrong?it's in the book <Web.Design.with.JavaScript.and.the.Document.Object.Model.2005> – Shore Jul 10 at 18:46
I added a bit at the end of my answer -- I don't think it's wrong, I think the DOM will do the right thing there. – technophile Jul 10 at 18:47
You mean appending a child to a textNode is the same as appending it to its parent? – Shore Jul 10 at 18:50
That would be my guess. However, it wouldn't be the first time some code got printed in a book despite being completely wrong. :) – technophile Jul 10 at 18:51
show 3 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

No. Elements may contain attributes, other elements, or text.

link|flag
hi,I've updated my question so that you can know why I have this question. – Shore Jul 10 at 18:51
I see. Text node in your sample is a leaf ("source" text under "a" node). And as I said above text coudn't be a parent for anything. – Alex Pavlov Jul 10 at 19:41

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