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I have the following HTML:

<html>
  <body>
    <div> 
      <span> $12.95 </span>
    </div>
  </body>
</html>

And the following Javascript:

var all = document.body.getElementsByTagName("*");
for (var i=0, max=all.length; i < max; i++) {
  console.log(all[i].nodeValue);
}

I see null in the console when it gets to the element. I am wondering how may I be able to get just the text of all the elements in a page? I know that if I use innerHTML I would get the text, but then I would get the text repeated somehow. So, for the <div> I would get <span> $12.95 </span> and then for the <span> I would get $12.95

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3 Answers 3

1

If you want to use nodeValue to get the contents then you have to traverse down to the text node that is contained within the span.

http://jsfiddle.net/xLJMb/

var all = document.body.getElementsByTagName("*");
for (var i=0, max=all.length; i < max; i++) {
  console.log(all[i].nodeValue);
  for(var j = 0, max2 = all[i].childNodes.length; j < max2; j++) {
    console.log(all[i].childNodes[j].nodeValue);
  }
}

Text Nodes are not elements, so they are not returned directly by getElementsByTagName().

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  • Mike Edwards. Thanks, exactly what I was looking for. I have a question though. Why would childeNodes.length of a <div></div> return 1? Oct 29, 2013 at 18:29
  • The span is a child of the div, the text node is a child of the span. The text node is a grand-child, not a child of the div. Oct 29, 2013 at 18:31
  • I guess my question was that if a <div> has some spaces between them, like <div> </div> it would count as it has a childNode. Oct 29, 2013 at 18:34
  • Ah. Well, I believe that behavior will be browser dependent. Some browsers will scrub the white-space and some will create textNodes with just white-space. I am using chrome and div.childNodes.length === 3 Oct 29, 2013 at 18:39
0

Why do not use from this html:

<div>
    <span id="span">$12.95 </span>
</div>

and this Script:

console.log($('#span').html());
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As addendum to the answer above, in modern browser, if you want to iterate only text node, you could use the TreeWalker API:

var treeWalker = document.createTreeWalker(
  document.body,
  NodeFilter.SHOW_TEXT,
  // Using ES6 arrow function, this is removing all "empty" text nodes
  // equivalent to:
  // function (node) { return !!node.nodeValue.trim() }
  node => !!node.nodeValue.trim()
);

while(treeWalker.nextNode())
  console.log(treeWalker.currentNode.nodeValue);
5
  • This is interesting. I have found myself with problems because the text node that I get, is used against a REGEX. Then for this kind of stuff <script type="text/javascript"> cmSetupOther({ "cm_TrackImpressions": "SCM" }); </script> -- I am basically screwed. Would treeWalker help? Oct 29, 2013 at 19:11
  • I'm not sure I got your question here. However, I don't think it would be much different, at the end you obtain always the string of nodeValue to use against a regex. I think in your case it depends which text and which regex.
    – ZER0
    Oct 29, 2013 at 19:43
  • ZER0 I am trying to get all the prices parsing a site. I want to avoid getting the text that are between <script> tags. As that text is Javascript. I am concerned on what I get, because I will use it against a .match function for regex. Oct 29, 2013 at 19:47
  • You could just update the filter function as follow: node => node.nodeValue.trim() && node.parentNode.tagName !== "SCRIPT". Notice that you can do the same check in the answer you accepted, just checking the tagName, or, in modern browsers, excluding script tag upfront: var all = document.body.querySelectorAll(":not(script)");
    – ZER0
    Oct 29, 2013 at 19:56
  • Thanks ZER0. I will go ahead and see what is going on. Because it seems sometimes I am getting some values which .match does not know how to deal with. Oct 29, 2013 at 20:18

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