16

I have this JavaScript code:

window.onload = init;

function init () {
    var button = document.getElementById("submitButton");
    button.onclick = addItem;
    var listItems = document.querySelectorAll("li");  //assigning the remove click event to all list items
    for (var i = 0; i < listItems.length; i++) {
        listItems[i].onclick = li.parentNode.removeChild(li);
    }
}

function addItem() {
    var textInput = document.getElementById("item");  //getting text input
    var text = textInput.value;   //getting value of text input element
    var ul = document.getElementById("ul");  //getting element <ul> to add element to
    var li = document.createElement("li");  //creating li element to add
    li.innerHTML = text;    //inserting text into newly created <li> element

    if (ul.childElementCount == 0) {  //using if/else statement to add items to top of list
        ul.appendChild(li);       // will add if count of ul children is 0 otherwise add before first item
    }
    else {
        ul.insertBefore(li, ul.firstChild);
    }
}

function remove(e) {
    var li = e.target;
    var listItems = document.querySelectorAll("li"); 
    var ul = document.getElementById("ul");
    li.parentNode.removeChild(li);        
}

and this HTML:

<body>
     <form>
         <label for="item">Add an item: </label>
          <input id="item" type="text" size="20"><br>
         <input id="submitButton" type="button" value="Add!">
     </form>
     <ul id="ul">
     </ul>
     <p>
         Click an item to remove it from the list.
    </p>  
</body>

What I want to do is remove the whichever <li> element the user clicks, but this doesn't seem to be working and I am unable to find an answer anywhere else online for this specific scenario. Hoping someone can help me out here and show me what i am missing.

1
  • listItems[i].onclick = function(e) {li.parentNode.removeChild(li)}; Jun 9, 2013 at 17:21

6 Answers 6

33

UPDATE

Plain JS delegation

Add the eventListener to the UL to delegate the click even on dynamically inserted LIs:

document.getElementById("ul").addEventListener("click",function(e) {
  var tgt = e.target;
  if (tgt.tagName.toUpperCase() == "LI") {
    tgt.parentNode.removeChild(tgt); // or tgt.remove();
  }
});

jQuery delegation

$(function() {
  $("#submitButton").on("click",function() {
    var text = $("#item").val();   //getting value of text input element
    var li = $('<li/>').text(text)
    $("#ul").prepend(li); 
  });
  $("#ul").on("click","li",function() {
    $(this).remove();
  });
});   

Original answer

Since you did not mention jQuery

var listItems = document.getElementsByTagName("li"); // or document.querySelectorAll("li"); 
for (var i = 0; i < listItems.length; i++) {
  listItems[i].onclick = function() {this.parentNode.removeChild(this);}
}

you may want to wrap that in

window.onload=function() { // or addEventListener
  // do stuff to the DOM here
}

Re-reading the question I think you also want to add that to the dynamic LIs

li.innerHTML = text;    //inserting text into newly created <li> element
li.onclick = function() {
  this.parentNode.removeChild(this);
   // or this.remove(); if supported
}

Here is the complete code as I expect you meant to code it

Live Demo

window.onload=function() {
  var button = document.getElementById("submitButton");
  button.onclick = addItem;
}   

function addItem() {
  var textInput = document.getElementById("item");  //getting text input
  var text = textInput.value;   //getting value of text input element
  var ul = document.getElementById("ul");  //getting element <ul> to add element to
  var li = document.createElement("li");  //creating li element to add
  li.innerHTML = text;    //inserting text into newly created <li> element
  li.onclick = function() {
    this.parentNode.removeChild(this);
    // or this.remove(); if supported
  }
  if (ul.childElementCount == 0) {  //using if/else statement to add items to top of list
    ul.appendChild(li); // will add if count of ul children is 0 otherwise add before first item
  }
  else {
    ul.insertBefore(li, ul.firstChild);
  }
}

In case you want to use jQuery, the whole thing gets somewhat simpler

Live Demo

$(function() {
    $("#submitButton").on("click",function() {
        var text = $("#item").val();   //getting value of text input element
        var li = $('<li/>')
          .text(text)
          .on("click",function() { $(this).remove()});
        $("#ul").prepend(li); 
    });
});   
10
  • Thanks for the non jquery answer, i put this into my init function in place of what i had and it didnt work, although i think i see why it would work, but maybe something in the addItem function is messing it up, i have added it to the code above. Am i missing something? Jun 9, 2013 at 17:27
  • See update. You have a function init that I do not see executed. If you use window.onload it should work better
    – mplungjan
    Jun 9, 2013 at 17:28
  • @mplungjan ;) just saw your update, will remove my comment then, as it's no longer needed. ;)
    – Yoshi
    Jun 9, 2013 at 17:32
  • just forgot that part of the code, good eyes everyone! the last edit of this answer got me exactly what i needed with minimal code, thank you for the answers! Jun 9, 2013 at 17:36
  • You are welcome. For completeness sake I added a jQuery version
    – mplungjan
    Jun 9, 2013 at 18:00
5

I know you already received an answer, but back to your original remove function. You have the following:

function remove(e) {
    var li = e.target;
    var listItems = document.querySelectorAll("li"); 
    var ul = document.getElementById("ul");
    li.parentNode.removeChild(li);        
}

Change it to this and you should get what you were trying to achieve:

function remove(e)
{
   var li = e.target;
   var ol = li.parentElement;
   ol.removeChild( li);
   return false;
}
1
  • Thank you, appreciate all the insight i can get. Nov 21, 2013 at 18:57
4

I'd suggest simplifying things a little:

Object.prototype.remove = function(){
    this.parentNode.removeChild(this);
};

var lis = document.querySelectorAll('li');

for (var i = 0, len = lis.length; i < len; i++) {
    lis[i].addEventListener('click', remove, false);
}

JS Fiddle demo.

Of course, having done the above, I'd then have to go further (possibly because I like jQuery too much) and also:

Object.prototype.on = function (evt, fn) {
    var self = this.length ? this : [this];
    for (var i = 0, len = self.length; i < len; i++){
        self[i].addEventListener(evt, fn, false);
    }
};
Object.prototype.remove = function(){
    var self = this.length ? this : [this];
    for (var i = 0, len = self.length; i < len; i++){
        self[i].parentNode.removeChild(self[i]);
    }
};

document.querySelectorAll('li').on('click', remove);

JS Fiddle demo.

7
  • 1
    It would be better if you extend the prototype of HTMLLIElement IMHO! Jun 9, 2013 at 17:36
  • Possibly, yes; but then that's limiting the use-case to only the HTMLLIElements. Jun 9, 2013 at 17:38
  • I suggest HTMLLIElement in this case obviously, anyway it would be better to extend HTMLElement prototype, or you could do something like {}.remove() wich would throw an exception Jun 9, 2013 at 17:39
  • you are now reinventing jQuery. I would really use jQuery instead of re-inventing .on
    – mplungjan
    Jun 9, 2013 at 17:41
  • @mplungjan is it better to import 15kb of script to use .on() than writing your own function? lol Jun 9, 2013 at 17:46
3

If you don't want to write function in javascript, you can use immediately invoked anonymous function like below...

<elem onclick="(function(_this){_this.parentNode.removeChild(_this);})(this);"
1

If I understood you correctly:

$("li").on("click", function() {
  $(this).remove()
});
1
  • 3
    I don't see a jquery tag?!
    – Yoshi
    Jun 9, 2013 at 17:23
0

The answer is more obvious than it could seem, you forgot to add init() in your script, is normal that the click event aren't triggered, they're not set on the element!

EDIT:

Your code has some logical errors. If you don't add an onclick function for all those created elements you will not be able to remove the clicked element. This is because the function init() is called one time at the load of the page!

function init() {
    var button = document.getElementById("submitButton");
    button.onclick = function() {addItem()};
}

function addItem() {
    var textInput = document.getElementById("item"); //getting text input
    var text = textInput.value; //getting value of text input element
    var ul = document.getElementById("ul"); //getting element <ul> to add element to
    var li = document.createElement("li"); //creating li element to add
    li.innerHTML = text; //inserting text into newly created <li> element
    li.onclick = function() {this.parentNode.removeChild(this);}

    if (ul.childElementCount == 0) { //using if/else statement to add items to top of list
        ul.appendChild(li); // will add if count of ul children is 0 otherwise add before first item
    } else {
        ul.insertBefore(li, ul.firstChild);
    }
}
init();
5
  • there is an init function there, not sure what you are referring to Jun 9, 2013 at 17:28
  • Yes, it is defined, but it is not called inside the script Jun 9, 2013 at 17:29
  • I was already editing the answer before you edited yours, anyway you answered exactly as me(even if you read the comment in the OP question) Jun 9, 2013 at 17:41
  • It would still fail. You need to call init after the DOM is ready, and your comment used li....(li) - and my initial version was a minute before your comment ;)
    – mplungjan
    Jun 9, 2013 at 17:43
  • Yes, it would fail, I tried it in JSFiddle selecting the option "no wrap - in body", but this is something that the OP didn't requested, so IMO is superfluous in this case Jun 9, 2013 at 17:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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