172

How do I get the next element in HTML using JavaScript?

Suppose I have three <div>s and I get a reference to one in JavaScript code, I want to get which is the next <div> and which is the previous.

10 Answers 10

331

use the nextSibling and previousSibling properties:

<div id="foo1"></div>
<div id="foo2"></div>
<div id="foo3"></div>

document.getElementById('foo2').nextSibling; // #foo3
document.getElementById('foo2').previousSibling; // #foo1

However in some browsers (I forget which) you also need to check for whitespace and comment nodes:

var div = document.getElementById('foo2');
var nextSibling = div.nextSibling;
while(nextSibling && nextSibling.nodeType != 1) {
    nextSibling = nextSibling.nextSibling
}

Libraries like jQuery handle all these cross-browser checks for you out of the box.

9
  • nextSibling and previousSibling (should) always return all nodes, not just element nodes shouldn't they? This includes text nodes, comment nodes, etc. Your second example looks like a good solution for this! Maybe you could cut down on the repetition with a do {} while(); loop? (edit: or recursion perhaps) Mar 27, 2010 at 11:04
  • 107
    nextElementSibling is much more useful.
    – Trisped
    Mar 14, 2012 at 22:39
  • 9
    Note that neither nextSibling nor nextElementSibling are fully cross browser compatible. Firefox's nextSibling returns text nodes while IE doesn't and nextElementsibling is not implemented until IE9. Jun 18, 2012 at 8:50
  • 3
    This will not work if the elements are not siblings.
    – rvighne
    Jan 12, 2014 at 3:22
  • 2
    @Kloar: The question asked how to get the "next [div] element in html." The next div in the markup might not be adjacent to the element; it might be a level deeper or a level higher.
    – rvighne
    May 27, 2014 at 21:54
38

Its quite simple. Try this instead:

let myReferenceDiv = document.getElementById('mydiv');
let prev = myReferenceDiv.previousElementSibling;
let next = myReferenceDiv.nextElementSibling;
34

Really depends on the overall structure of your document.

If you have:

<div></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>

it may be as simple as traversing through using

mydiv.nextSibling;
mydiv.previousSibling;

However, if the 'next' div could be anywhere in the document you'll need a more complex solution. You could try something using

document.getElementsByTagName("div");

and running through these to get where you want somehow.

If you are doing lots of complex DOM traversing such as this I would recommend looking into a library such as jQuery.

1
  • 3
    nextSibling() .. should be nextSibling, I think
    – paul_h
    Jan 8, 2017 at 19:41
33

Well in pure javascript my thinking is that you would first have to collate them inside a collection.

var divs = document.getElementsByTagName("div");
//divs now contain each and every div element on the page
var selectionDiv = document.getElementById("MySecondDiv");

So basically with selectionDiv iterate through the collection to find its index, and then obviously -1 = previous +1 = next within bounds

for(var i = 0; i < divs.length;i++)
{
   if(divs[i] == selectionDiv)
   {
     var previous = divs[i - 1];
     var next = divs[i + 1];
   }
}

Please be aware though as I say that extra logic would be required to check that you are within the bounds i.e. you are not at the end or start of the collection.

This also will mean that say you have a div which has a child div nested. The next div would not be a sibling but a child, So if you only want siblings on the same level as the target div then definately use nextSibling checking the tagName property.

1
  • 1
    seams good solution but how to get the next element, as you wrote now i have the collection and the selected one, can you help me more? Feb 22, 2009 at 13:25
27

There is a attribute on every HTMLElement, "previousElementSibling".

Ex:

<div id="a">A</div>
<div id="b">B</div>
<div id="c">c</div>

<div id="result">Resultado: </div>

var b = document.getElementById("c").previousElementSibling;

document.getElementById("result").innerHTML += b.innerHTML;

Live: http://jsfiddle.net/QukKM/

1
  • This fails on IE8 (haven't checked on other IE versions). previousSibling seems to be the cross browser solution.
    – Niks
    Oct 8, 2013 at 7:05
17

This will be easy... its an pure javascript code

    <script>
           alert(document.getElementById("someElement").previousElementSibling.innerHTML);
    </script>
0
9

all these solutions look like an overkill. Why use my solution?

previousElementSibling supported from IE9

document.addEventListener needs a polyfill

previousSibling might return a text

Please note i have chosen to return the first/last element in case boundaries are broken. In a RL usage, i would prefer it to return a null.

var el = document.getElementById("child1"),
    children = el.parentNode.children,
    len = children.length,
    ind = [].indexOf.call(children, el),
    nextEl = children[ind === len ? len : ind + 1],
    prevEl = children[ind === 0 ? 0 : ind - 1];
    
    document.write(nextEl.id);
    document.write("<br/>");
    document.write(prevEl.id);
<div id="parent">
  <div id="child1"></div>
  <div id="child2"></div>
</div>

0
7

You can use nextElementSibling or previousElementSibling properties

<div>
    <span id="elem-1">
        span
    </span>
</div>
<div data-id="15">
    Parent Sibling
</div>


const sp = document.querySelector('#elem-1');
let sibling_data_id = sp.parentNode.nextElementSibling.dataset.id;
console.log(sibling_data_id); // 15
1

Tested it and it worked for me. The element finding me change as per the document structure that you have.

<html>
    <head>
        <script type="text/javascript" src="test.js"></script>
    </head>
    <body>
        <form method="post" id = "formId" action="action.php" onsubmit="return false;">
            <table>
                <tr>
                    <td>
                        <label class="standard_text">E-mail</label>
                    </td>
                    <td><input class="textarea"  name="mail" id="mail" placeholder="E-mail"></label></td>
                    <td><input class="textarea"  name="name" id="name" placeholder="E-mail">   </label></td>
                    <td><input class="textarea"  name="myname" id="myname" placeholder="E-mail"></label></td>
                    <td><div class="check_icon icon_yes" style="display:none" id="mail_ok_icon"></div></td>
                    <td><div class="check_icon icon_no" style="display:none" id="mail_no_icon"></div></label></td>
                    <td><div class="check_message" style="display:none" id="mail_message"><label class="important_text">The email format is not correct!</label></div></td>
                </tr>
            </table>
            <input class="button_submit" type="submit" name="send_form" value="Register"/>
        </form>
    </body>
</html>

 

var inputs;
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function(event) {
    var form = document.getElementById('formId');
    inputs = form.getElementsByTagName("input");
    for(var i = 0 ; i < inputs.length;i++) {
        inputs[i].addEventListener('keydown', function(e){
            if(e.keyCode == 13) {
                var currentIndex = findElement(e.target)
                if(currentIndex > -1 && currentIndex < inputs.length) {
                    inputs[currentIndex+1].focus();
                }
            }   
        });
    }
});

function findElement(element) {
    var index = -1;
    for(var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
        if(inputs[i] == element) {
            return i;
        }
    }
    return index;
}
-1

that's so simple

var element = querySelector("div")
var nextelement = element.parentElement.querySelector("div+div")

Here is the browser supports https://caniuse.com/queryselector

1
  • 1
    Should be element.parentElement, ParentElement doesn't seem to work.
    – Thomas
    Jun 8, 2022 at 17:23

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