165

Simple question, I have an element which I am grabbing via .getElementById (). How do I check if it has any children?

8 Answers 8

296

A couple of ways:

if (element.firstChild) {
    // It has at least one
}

or the hasChildNodes() function:

if (element.hasChildNodes()) {
    // It has at least one
}

or the length property of childNodes:

if (element.childNodes.length > 0) { // Or just `if (element.childNodes.length)`
    // It has at least one
}

If you only want to know about child elements (as opposed to text nodes, attribute nodes, etc.) on all modern browsers (and IE8 — in fact, even IE6) you can do this: (thank you Florian!)

if (element.children.length > 0) { // Or just `if (element.children.length)`
    // It has at least one element as a child
}

That relies on the children property, which wasn't defined in DOM1, DOM2, or DOM3, but which has near-universal support. (It works in IE6 and up and Chrome, Firefox, and Opera at least as far back as November 2012, when this was originally written.) If supporting older mobile devices, be sure to check for support.

If you don't need IE8 and earlier support, you can also do this:

if (element.firstElementChild) {
    // It has at least one element as a child
}

That relies on firstElementChild. Like children, it wasn't defined in DOM1-3 either, but unlike children it wasn't added to IE until IE9. The same applies to childElementCount:

if (element.childElementCount !== 0) {
    // It has at least one element as a child
}

If you want to stick to something defined in DOM1 (maybe you have to support really obscure browsers), you have to do more work:

var hasChildElements, child;
hasChildElements = false;
for (child = element.firstChild; child; child = child.nextSibling) {
    if (child.nodeType == 1) { // 1 == Element
        hasChildElements = true;
        break;
    }
}

All of that is part of DOM1, and nearly universally supported.

It would be easy to wrap this up in a function, e.g.:

function hasChildElement(elm) {
    var child, rv;

    if (elm.children) {
        // Supports `children`
        rv = elm.children.length !== 0;
    } else {
        // The hard way...
        rv = false;
        for (child = element.firstChild; !rv && child; child = child.nextSibling) {
            if (child.nodeType == 1) { // 1 == Element
                rv = true;
            }
        }
    }
    return rv;
}
13
  • 1
    Oh, I didn't realize children was only added in DOM4. Knowing it was supported in any known browser, I thought this was pretty much DOM0/1. Nov 9, 2012 at 12:29
  • how do i check if any div has element div having specific class say xyz ? Feb 20, 2013 at 11:04
  • 1
    Never seen a loop condition like for (child = element.firstChild; child; child = child.nextSibling ), voted. Thanks T.J. Jul 9, 2015 at 0:40
  • 2
    @Aaron: It's entirely possible for element.firstChild to be non-null when element.children.length is 0: firstChild and such relate to nodes including elements, text nodes, comment notes, etc.; children is purely a list of element children. On modern browsers you can use firstElementChild instead. Aug 18, 2015 at 6:01
  • 1
    @TysonGibby - Wow, didn't know about childElementCount. Looking it up, note that childElementCount only counts child elements, not all child nodes (just like children.length does). Perhaps you were trying to "detect" using firstChild or similar, and the element contained text nodes or comment nodes (but not elements). :-) Feb 9, 2021 at 16:09
16

As slashnick & bobince mention, hasChildNodes() will return true for whitespace (text nodes). However, I didn't want this behaviour, and this worked for me :)

element.getElementsByTagName('*').length > 0

Edit: for the same functionality, this is a better solution:

 element.children.length > 0

children[] is a subset of childNodes[], containing elements only.

Compatibility

0
8

You could also do the following:

if (element.innerHTML.trim() !== '') {
    // It has at least one
} 

This uses the trim() method to treat empty elements which have only whitespaces (in which case hasChildNodes returns true) as being empty.

NB: The above method doesn't filter out comments. (so a comment would classify a a child)

To filter out comments as well, we could make use of the read-only Node.nodeType property where Node.COMMENT_NODE (A Comment node, such as <!-- … -->) has the constant value - 8

if (element.firstChild?.nodeType !== 8 && element.innerHTML.trim() !== '' {
   // It has at least one
}

let divs = document.querySelectorAll('div');
for(element of divs) {
  if (element.firstChild?.nodeType !== 8 && element.innerHTML.trim() !== '') {
   console.log('has children')
  } else { console.log('no children') }
}
<div><span>An element</span>
<div>some text</div>
<div>     </div> <!-- whitespace -->
<div><!-- A comment --></div>
<div></div>

2
  • How does this behave with HTML comments? Nov 15, 2019 at 9:39
  • @VictorZamanian nice point! - I added code for that... of course, if the intention is not to include text node and comments as children, then element.firstElementChild is probably the easiest way to go :)
    – Danield
    Dec 7, 2020 at 9:09
6

You can check if the element has child nodes element.hasChildNodes(). Beware in Mozilla this will return true if the is whitespace after the tag so you will need to verify the tag type.

https://developer.mozilla.org/En/DOM/Node.hasChildNodes

1
  • 7
    Not just in Mozilla. This is correct behaviour; it's IE that gets it wrong.
    – bobince
    Jan 29, 2010 at 12:35
5

Try the childElementCount property:

if ( element.childElementCount !== 0 ){
      alert('i have children');
} else {
      alert('no kids here');
}
2

Late but document fragment could be a node:

function hasChild(el){
    var child = el && el.firstChild;
    while (child) {
        if (child.nodeType === 1 || child.nodeType === 11) {
            return true;
        }
        child = child.nextSibling;
    }
    return false;
}
// or
function hasChild(el){
    for (var i = 0; el && el.childNodes[i]; i++) {
        if (el.childNodes[i].nodeType === 1 || el.childNodes[i].nodeType === 11) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}

See:
https://github.com/k-gun/so/blob/master/so.dom.js#L42
https://github.com/k-gun/so/blob/master/so.dom.js#L741

1

A reusable isEmpty( <selector> ) function.
You can also run it toward a collection of elements (see example)

const isEmpty = sel =>
    ![... document.querySelectorAll(sel)].some(el => el.innerHTML.trim() !== "");

console.log(
  isEmpty("#one"), // false
  isEmpty("#two"), // true
  isEmpty(".foo"), // false
  isEmpty(".bar")  // true
);
<div id="one">
 foo
</div>

<div id="two">
 
</div>

<div class="foo"></div>
<div class="foo"><p>foo</p></div>
<div class="foo"></div>

<div class="bar"></div>
<div class="bar"></div>
<div class="bar"></div>

returns true (and exits loop) as soon one element has any kind of content beside spaces or newlines.

-10
<script type="text/javascript">

function uwtPBSTree_NodeChecked(treeId, nodeId, bChecked) 
{
    //debugger;
    var selectedNode = igtree_getNodeById(nodeId);
    var ParentNodes = selectedNode.getChildNodes();

    var length = ParentNodes.length;

    if (bChecked) 
    {
/*                if (length != 0) {
                    for (i = 0; i < length; i++) {
                        ParentNodes[i].setChecked(true);
                    }
    }*/
    }
    else 
    {
        if (length != 0) 
        {
            for (i = 0; i < length; i++) 
            {
                ParentNodes[i].setChecked(false);
            }
        }
    }
}
</script>

<ignav:UltraWebTree ID="uwtPBSTree" runat="server"..........>
<ClientSideEvents NodeChecked="uwtPBSTree_NodeChecked"></ClientSideEvents>
</ignav:UltraWebTree>
3
  • Please don't just provide code-only solutions. Also, why have you commented-out code in there?
    – Lee Taylor
    Dec 9, 2012 at 1:37
  • Downvote: This code is obscure, part of the code is unnecesary, there is not comments or explanation and it look like a copy/past. Also the XML part has nothing to do here. Sep 30, 2013 at 11:23
  • 2
    What is this madness? Jul 9, 2015 at 0:41

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