vote up 0 vote down star

I have the following table being rendered in my browser. It's generated from the server side.

<table id="tblQuestions" class="tblQuestionsContainer" border="0">
	<tr>
		<td id="1" class="tdQuestion">Are u an indian citizen ?</td>
	</tr><tr>
		<td><table id="answer-1" border="0">
			<tr>
				<td><input id="answer-1_0" type="radio" name="answer-1" value="1" /><label for="answer-1_0">Yes</label></td><td><input id="answer-1_1" type="radio" name="answer-1" value="0" /><label for="answer-1_1">No</label></td>
			</tr>
		</table></td>
	</tr><tr>
		<td id="2" class="tdQuestion">Do you have a passport ?</td>
	</tr><tr>
		<td><table id="answer-2" border="0">
			<tr>
				<td><input id="answer-2_0" type="radio" name="answer-2" value="1" /><label for="answer-2_0">Yes</label></td><td><input id="answer-2_1" type="radio" name="answer-2" value="0" /><label for="answer-2_1">No</label></td>
			</tr>
		</table></td>
	</tr>
</table>

Now I am using the following code in my JavaScript to validate the radio button's checked state.

 var tblQuestionBoard=document.getElementById("tblQuestions");
  tblAnswer = tblQuestionBoard.rows[1].childNodes[0].childNodes[0]

Now tblAnswer should be an object having the Table with id "answer-1"

In IE, I am getting it. But in Mozilla and rest of the browsers I am getting it as undefined.

How to solve this?

flag

54% accept rate

1 Answer

vote up 4 vote down

It's because you're using childNodes and whitespaces in the DOM are considered to be text nodes by Firefox et. al but not IE

See this answer for an explanation

My suggestions

1.Set up some wrapper functions that ignore any nodeType other than 1 (ELEMENT_NODE) to do DOM traversing. Something like

function child(elem, index) {
    // if index is not supplied, default is 1 
    // you might be more comfortable making this 0-based
    // in which case change i initial assignment value to 0 too
    index = index || 1; 
    // get first child element node of elem
    elem = (elem.firstChild && elem.firstChild.nodeType != 1) ?
               next(elem.firstChild) :
               elem.firstChild; 
    // use the index to move to nth-child element node  		   
    for(var i=1; i < index;i++) {
        (function() {	  
            return elem = next(elem); 		  
        })();		 
    }
    return elem;
}

function next(elem) {
    do {
        elem = elem.nextSibling;
    } while (elem && elem.nodeType != 1);
return elem;                
}

and use like so - Working Demo - (Code at the bottom of the answer for reference)

<table id="myTable">
    <thead>
        ...
    </thead>
    <tbody>
        ...
    </tbody>
</table>

<script type="text/javascript">
    child(document.getElementById('myTable'), 2); // will get the tbody
</script>

2.Use getElementbyId(), getElementsByTagName() or getElementsByName() instead of relying on position in the DOM

3.Use a JavaScript library that abstracts away browser differences (jQuery comes highly recommended)

The Demo Code

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
  "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
    window.onload = function() {    
       document.getElementById('getCellContents').onclick = getCellContents;	
    }

    function child(elem, index) {
        index = index || 1; 
        elem = (elem.firstChild && elem.firstChild.nodeType != 1) ?
                   next(elem.firstChild) :
                   elem.firstChild;			   
        for(var i=1; i < index;i++) {
    	    (function() {	 
    	        return elem = next(elem); 		  
    	    })();		 
    	}
        return elem;
    }

    function next(elem) {
        do {
            elem = elem.nextSibling;
        } while (elem && elem.nodeType != 1);
    return elem;                
    }

    function getCellContents() {
    	var row = parseInt(document.getElementById('row').value, 10);
    	var column = parseInt(document.getElementById('column').value, 10);
        var result;
    	var color;
    	var table = document.getElementById('table');
    	var cells = table.getElementsByTagName('td');
    	for (var i= 0; i < cells.length; i++) {
    		(function() {
    			cells[i].bgColor = '#ffffff';
    		})();
    	}

    	if (row && column) {
    		var tbody = child(table , 2);
    		var selectedRow = (row <= tbody.getElementsByTagName("tr").length)? child(tbody, row): null;
    		var selectedCell = (selectedRow && column <= selectedRow.getElementsByTagName("td").length)? child(selectedRow, column): null;	

    	    if (selectedRow && selectedCell) {
    			selectedCell.bgColor = '#00ff00';
    			result = selectedC
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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