vote up 3 vote down star

Say for instance I was writing a function that was designed to accept multiple argument types:

var overloaded = function (arg) {
	if (is_dom_element(arg)) {
		// Code for DOM Element argument...
	}
};

What's the best way to implement is_dom_element so that it works in a cross-browser, fairly accurate way?

flag

4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

jQuery checks the nodeType property. So you would have:

var overloaded = function (arg) {
    if (arg.nodeType) {
        // Code for DOM Element argument...
    }
};

Although this would detect all DOM objects, not just elements. If you want elements alone, that would be:

var overloaded = function (arg) {
    if (arg.nodeType && arg.nodeType == 1) {
        // Code for DOM Element argument...
    }
};
link|flag
Great, if it's good enough for jQuery it should be fine for my needs. Thanks! – Mathew Byrne Sep 23 '08 at 10:57
vote up -1 vote down

What about

obj instanceof HTMLElement
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Probably this one here:

node instanceof HTMLElement

That should work in most browsers. Otherwise you have to duck-type it (eg. typeof x.nodeType != 'undefined')

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

typically you would check to see if the nodeName is defined on the object.

if(obj.nodeName){
    //Do Stuff here
}
link|flag
Other DOM objects also have the nodeName property. For example, the name of an attribute is stored in nodeName too. – Jim Sep 23 '08 at 10:53

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.