2

I'm wondering what the best way is to find children of an element in jQuery, but also include the parent in the 'find'.

Here's my simplified basic HTML setup:

<div id="container">
    <form id="form1"> <!-- form 1 content --> </form>
    <form id="form2"> <!-- form 2 content --> </form>
</div>

And I want a function like this...

function getForms ($container) 
{
    // Option 1
    var $allForms = $container.find('form').andSelf().filter('form');

    // Option 2
    var $allForms = $container.find('form');
    if ($container.is('form')) $allForms.add($container);

    // Should return all the forms in the container if passed $('#container')
    // Or return just one form if passed $('#form1')
    return $allForms;
}

I'm fairly certain that both option 1 or 2 will work. Does anyone know which option above is more efficient? Are there other options which are more elegant or more efficient?

EDIT: I wasn't happy with the .is() in option 2 because it didn't work when the container had multiple jQuery objects in it. So I came up with something like this:

// Option 3
function getContainerElements ($container, selector) {
    return $container.find(selector).add($container.filter(selector));
}

I haven't tested it too much, but I think it'll work for all general cases.

16
  • 2
    This might fit better over on codereview.stackexchange.com
    – j08691
    Oct 26, 2012 at 20:37
  • 1
    My guess (without actually benchmarking it) would be #2 is more efficient. In #1 you are adding the container, and then filtering the whole list and potentially removing it again. Option #2 check it before adding it and doesn't have to filter the list again to remove it. Oct 26, 2012 at 20:41
  • var $allForms = $container.find('form').andSelf()
    – SpYk3HH
    Oct 26, 2012 at 20:41
  • 1
    @SpYk3HH: I think the point is that $container may or may not be a form. Oct 26, 2012 at 20:44
  • @Luke, are the <form> elements always immediate children of $container, or do you want to also support descendants? Oct 26, 2012 at 20:45

2 Answers 2

1

Option 2 is better according to JSPerf tests (Tested in Chrome on linux)

You can see the results here and the tests if you want to try it in different browsers: http://jsperf.com/children-and-self

Note: I've updated this test to use divs instead of forms (because forms inside other forms don't work: Form inside a form, is that alright?) and we want to test the case where the parent should be added to get the real performance impact as per comment below

enter image description here

EDIT

Added third option performance as requested in comment

6
  • 1
    But in your test the container is never a form, so the if block never gets executed. It's an unfair comparison, I think.
    – pimvdb
    Oct 26, 2012 at 21:10
  • @pimvdb Thanks that's very true. Must be Friday! Also forms cannot be nested so it probably better to use a different example since the title is about self and children, not specific to form elements. I'll update the tests... Oct 26, 2012 at 21:23
  • @CraigMacGregor - Would you be able to test my Option 3 in the edit above? I really appreciate the benchmarking tests.
    – Luke
    Oct 30, 2012 at 22:14
  • @pimvdb I've added the third option for you. Enjoy :) Oct 31, 2012 at 13:21
  • Sorry, for someone reading this question looking for an independent answer, this is not it. The selector to answer the question is... ?
    – PandaWood
    Aug 6, 2015 at 5:44
0

If you are really only looking for a single element rather than a set of elements, then the following should work at least as well as your option 3 and be faster:

function getContainerElements ($container, selector) {
  var filtered = $container.filter(selector);
  return filtered.length ? filtered : $container.find(selector);
}

In case there are both descendant and root elements matching selector, this will return only the matching root elements, unlike your option 3, which will put everything together. If you do want that, then modern jQuery allows a simpler solution:

function getContainerElements ($container, selector) {
  return $container.find(selector).addBack(selector);
}

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