680

I'm trying to set get id of all elements in an HTMLCollectionOf. I wrote the following code:

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
console.log(list[0].id);
for (key in list) {
    console.log(key.id);
}

But I got the following output in console:

event1
undefined

which is not what I expected. Why is the second console output undefined but the first console output is event1?

1
  • 16
    Word of caution: Whatever construct you choose, please beaware of the fact that getElementsByClassName gives a live collection of nodes having that CSS class. So that collection might change if you play with class attribue of node being iterated within the loop. In that case, most of the constructs will go for a toss except Array.from(....).forEach. Array.from does object cloning and creates a separate object which is then iterated.
    – RBT
    May 22, 2021 at 16:13

14 Answers 14

1353
+50

In response to the original question, you are using for/in incorrectly. In your code, key is the index. So, to get the value from the pseudo-array, you'd have to do list[key] and to get the id, you'd do list[key].id. But, you should not be doing this with for/in in the first place.

Summary (added in Dec 2018)

Do not ever use for/in to iterate a nodeList or an HTMLCollection. The reasons to avoid it are described below.

All recent versions of modern browsers (Safari, Firefox, Chrome, Edge) all support for/of iteration on DOM lists such nodeList or HTMLCollection.

Here's an example:

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
for (let item of list) {
    console.log(item.id);
}

To include older browsers (including things like IE), this will work everywhere:

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
for (var i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
    console.log(list[i].id); //second console output
}

Explanation For Why You Should Not Use for/in

for/in is meant for iterating the properties of an object. That means it will return all iterable properties of an object. While it may appear to work for an array (returning array elements or pseudo-array elements), it can also return other properties of the object that are not what you are expecting from the array-like elements. And, guess what, an HTMLCollection or nodeList object can both have other properties that will be returned with a for/in iteration. I just tried this in Chrome and iterating it the way you were iterating it will retrieve the items in the list (indexes 0, 1, 2, etc...), but also will retrieve the length and item properties. The for/in iteration simply won't work for an HTMLCollection.


See http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/FzZ2H/ for why you can't iterate an HTMLCollection with for/in.

In Firefox, your for/in iteration would return these items (all the iterable properties of the object):

0
1
2
item
namedItem
@@iterator
length

Hopefully, now you can see why you want to use for (var i = 0; i < list.length; i++) instead so you just get 0, 1 and 2 in your iteration.


Evolution of Browser Support for NodeList and HTMLCollection iteration

Following below is an evolution of how browsers have evolved through the time period 2015-2018 giving you additional ways to iterate. None of these are now needed in modern browsers since you can use the options described above.

Update for ES6 in 2015

Added to ES6 is Array.from() that will convert an array-like structure to an actual array. That allows one to enumerate a list directly like this:

"use strict";

Array.from(document.getElementsByClassName("events")).forEach(function(item) {
   console.log(item.id);
});

Working demo (in Firefox, Chrome, and Edge as of April 2016): https://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/8ar4xn2s/


Update for ES6 in 2016

You can now use the ES6 for/of construct with a NodeList and an HTMLCollection by just adding this to your code:

NodeList.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator];
HTMLCollection.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator];

Then, you can do:

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
for (var item of list) {
    console.log(item.id);
}

This works in the current version of Chrome, Firefox, and Edge. This works because it attaches the Array iterator to both the NodeList and HTMLCollection prototypes so that when for/of iterates them, it uses the Array iterator to iterate them.

Working demo: http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/joy06u4e/.


Second Update for ES6 in Dec 2016

As of Dec 2016, Symbol.iterator support has been built-in to Chrome v54 and Firefox v50 so the code below works by itself. It is not yet built-in for Edge.

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
for (let item of list) {
    console.log(item.id);
}

Working demo (in Chrome and Firefox): http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/3ddpz8sp/

Third Update for ES6 in Dec 2017

As of Dec. 2017, this capability works in Edge 41.16299.15.0 for a nodeList as in document.querySelectorAll(), but not an HTMLCollection as in document.getElementsByClassName() so you have to manually assign the iterator to use it in Edge for an HTMLCollection. It is a total mystery why they'd fix one collection type, but not the other. But, you can at least use the result of document.querySelectorAll() with ES6 for/of syntax in current versions of Edge now.

I've also updated the above jsFiddle so it tests both HTMLCollection and nodeList separately and captures the output in the jsFiddle itself.

Fourth Update for ES6 in Mar 2018

Per mesqueeeb, Symbol.iterator support has been built-in to Safari too, so you can use for (let item of list) for either document.getElementsByClassName() or document.querySelectorAll().

Fifth Update for ES6 in Apr 2018

Apparently, support for iterating an HTMLCollection with for/of will be coming to Edge 18 in Fall 2018.

Sixth Update for ES6 in Nov 2018

I can confirm that with Microsoft Edge v18 (that is included in the Fall 2018 Windows Update), you can now iterate both an HTMLCollection and a NodeList with for/of in Edge.

So, now all modern browsers contain native support for for/of iteration of both the HTMLCollection and NodeList objects.

11
  • 2
    Thank you for the great updates you have been doing. Just out of interest, do you know if they are going to add that HTMLCollection should have Symbol.iterator into the spec? I know all the browsers are doing it, but as far as I know, the spec has no mention of it, and the Typescript definitions are built from spec, not implementations.
    – WORMSS
    Jul 1, 2021 at 10:54
  • 1
    @WORMSS - I don't know. But, if I were to guess, this note in the LivingStandard document: HTMLCollection is a historical artifact we cannot rid the web of. While developers are of course welcome to keep using it, new API standard designers ought not to use it (use sequence<T> in IDL instead) sounds like it's not likely to get enhanced any more as they don't want to encourage you to use the live collections APIs any more - probably because it's very easy to create bugs if you are iterating a live collection while modifying the DOM.
    – jfriend00
    Jul 1, 2021 at 14:23
  • to be able to use "for (let item of list)" in typescript, I had to add "dom.iterable" to tsconfig.json, see stackoverflow.com/a/60342425/379279
    – xhafan
    Jan 3, 2023 at 12:28
  • Summary (Dec 2018) advice conflicts with latest update (sixth, Nov 2018). Should we or shouldn't we use for/of for HTMLCollection and NodeList? Dec 19, 2023 at 17:48
  • 1
    @Timo - I think it's pretty clear now that your issue does not have anything to do with THIS question so we shouldn't continue to discuss it here. Please write your own question and show all the relevant details and ask a clear question.
    – jfriend00
    Feb 20 at 5:09
95

You can't use for/in on NodeLists or HTMLCollections. However, you can use some Array.prototype methods, as long as you .call() them and pass in the NodeList or HTMLCollection as this.

So consider the following as an alternative to jfriend00's for loop:

var list= document.getElementsByClassName("events");
[].forEach.call(list, function(el) {
    console.log(el.id);
});

There's a good article on MDN that covers this technique. Note their warning about browser compatibility though:

[...] passing a host object (like a NodeList) as this to a native method (such as forEach) is not guaranteed to work in all browsers and is known to fail in some.

So while this approach is convenient, a for loop may be the most browser-compatible solution.

Update (Aug 30, 2014): Eventually you'll be able to use ES6 for/of!

var list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
for (const el of list)
  console.log(el.id);

It's already supported in recent versions of Chrome and Firefox.

2
  • 1
    Very nice! I used this technique to get the values of selected options from a <select multiple>. Example: [].map.call(multiSelect.selectedOptions, function(option) { return option.value; }) Apr 1, 2015 at 2:49
  • 1
    I was looking for an ES2015 solution to this, so thanks for confirming that for ... of works. Nov 18, 2015 at 11:04
88

In ES6, you could do something like [...collection], or Array.from(collection),

let someCollection = document.querySelectorAll(someSelector)
[...someCollection].forEach(someFn) 
//or
Array.from(collection).forEach(someFn)

Eg:-

    navDoms = document.getElementsByClassName('nav-container');
    Array.from(navDoms).forEach(function(navDom){
     //implement function operations
    });
3
  • @DanielM guess what I have done is, shallow clone an array-like structure
    – mido
    Oct 27, 2016 at 12:59
  • I see, thanks -- now I have found the documentation I was looking for: developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
    – DanielM
    Oct 27, 2016 at 13:12
  • 1
    I always use this, much easier to the eyes than Array.from, I just wonder if it has considerable performance or memory drawbacks. For example if I need to iterate a table row's cells I use a [...row.cells].forEach instead of doing a row.querySelectorAll('td')
    – Mojimi
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:18
17

you can add this two lines:

HTMLCollection.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
NodeList.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;

HTMLCollection is return by getElementsByClassName and getElementsByTagName

NodeList is return by querySelectorAll

Like this you can do a forEach:

var selections = document.getElementsByClassName('myClass');

/* alternative :
var selections = document.querySelectorAll('.myClass');
*/

selections.forEach(function(element, i){
//do your stuffs
});
4
  • This answer seems so effective. What is the catch?
    – Peheje
    Apr 26, 2018 at 7:48
  • 3
    The catch is that this solution doesn't work on IE11 ! Good solution though.
    – Rahul Gaba
    Jul 6, 2018 at 7:29
  • 6
    Note that NodeList already has forEach(). Feb 26, 2020 at 4:49
  • I am curious about browsers support of this. Looks awesome.
    – Muhammed
    Feb 3, 2021 at 12:51
13

Alternative to Array.from is to use Array.prototype.forEach.call

forEach: Array.prototype.forEach.call(htmlCollection, i => { console.log(i) });

map: Array.prototype.map.call(htmlCollection, i => { console.log(i) });

10

There's no reason to use es6 features to escape for looping if you're on IE9 or above.

In ES5, there are two good options. First, you can "borrow" Array's forEach as evan mentions.

But even better...

Use Object.keys(), which does have forEach and filters to "own properties" automatically.

That is, Object.keys is essentially equivalent to doing a for... in with a HasOwnProperty, but is much smoother.

var eventNodes = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
Object.keys(eventNodes).forEach(function (key) {
    console.log(eventNodes[key].id);
});
7

I had a problem using forEach in IE 11 and also Firefox 49

I have found a workaround like this

Array.prototype.slice.call(document.getElementsByClassName("events")).forEach(function (key) {
        console.log(key.id);
    }
1
5

As of March 2016, in Chrome 49.0, for...of works for HTMLCollection:

this.headers = this.getElementsByTagName("header");

for (var header of this.headers) {
    console.log(header); 
}

See here the documentation.

But it only works if you apply the following workaround before using the for...of:

HTMLCollection.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator];

The same is necessary for using for...of with NodeList:

NamedNodeMap.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator];

I believe/hope for...of will soon work without the above workaround. The open issue is here:

https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=401699

Update: See Expenzor's comment below: This has been fixed as of April 2016. You don't need to add HTMLCollection.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator]; to iterate over an HTMLCollection with for...of

1
  • 4
    This has been fixed as of April 2016. You don't need to add HTMLCollection.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator]; to iterate over an HTMLCollection with for...of.
    – Expenzor
    Nov 20, 2016 at 8:52
4

Easy workaround that I always use

let list = document.getElementsByClassName("events");
let listArr = Array.from(list)

After this you can run any desired Array methods on the selection

listArr.map(item => console.log(item.id))
listArr.forEach(item => console.log(item.id))
listArr.reverse()
3

On Edge

if(!NodeList.prototype.forEach) {
  NodeList.prototype.forEach = function(fn, scope) {
    for(var i = 0, len = this.length; i < len; ++i) {
      fn.call(scope, this[i], i, this);
    }
  }
}
1

if you use oldder varsions of ES, (ES5 for example), you can use as any:

for (let element of elementsToIterate as any) {
      console.log(element);
}

1

You can also do like this:

 let elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");
 for(let index in  elements) {
   if(index <= elements.length) {
        console.log(elements[index]);
  }
}

let elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");
for (let index in elements) {
  if (index <= elements.length) {
    console.log(elements[index]);
  }
}
<div class="classname"> element 1 </div>
<div class="classname"> element 2 </div>
<div class="classname"> element 3 </div>

or

 let elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");
 for(let ele of  elements) {
        console.log(ele);
}

let elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");
for (let ele of elements) {
  console.log(ele);
}
<div class="classname"> element 1 </div>
<div class="classname"> element 2 </div>
<div class="classname"> element 3 </div>
<div class="classname"> element 4 </div>

0

You want to change it to

var list= document.getElementsByClassName("events");
console.log(list[0].id); //first console output
for (key in list){
    console.log(list[key].id); //second console output
}
1
  • 7
    FYI, see my answer for why this won't work properly. The for (key in list) will return several properties of the HTMLCollection that are not meant to be items in the collection.
    – jfriend00
    Mar 31, 2014 at 6:07
0

To delete all options from datalist:

function removeOptions(datalist_id) {
    const selectElement = document.getElementById(datalist_id);
    Array.from(selectElement.children).forEach(el=> el.remove());
}

Then call this:

removeOptions("your_datalist_id");

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