In my code, I see this:
if (document.getElementById('xx') !=null) {
//do stuff
}
if xx
element is not defined, will this evaluate to true or false?
Should I write:
if (document.getElementById('xx'))
to be safe?
console.log(document.getElementById('xx') ) evaluates to null.
document.getElementById('xx') !=null evaluates to false
You should use document.getElementById('xx') !== null
as it is a stronger equality check.
getElementById
is defined by DOM Level 1 HTML to return null
in the case no element is matched.
!==null
is the most explicit form of the check, and probably the best, but there is no non-null
falsy value that getElementById
can return - you can only get null
or an always-truthy Element object. So there's no practical difference here between !==null
, !=null
or the looser if (document.getElementById('xx'))
.
getElementById
returns is null
, there is no reason to check for any other value if you are only looking to check for existence.
Yes it will return null if it's not present you can try this below in the demo. Both will return true. The first elements exists the second doesn't.
Html
<div id="xx"></div>
Javascript:
if (document.getElementById('xx') !=null)
console.log('it exists!');
if (document.getElementById('xxThisisNotAnElementOnThePage') ==null)
console.log('does not exist!');
null if an element with the specified ID is not in the document
(mdn)document.getElementById('xx')
will returnsundefined
null
. Test it in the console.null
there too.