2

I was given an eshop after someone else who wasnt really caring about the site performance and made a really anti-performance CSS, and since no CSS minifyer works crossbrowser-properly on such a huge CSS file (not even eshop's own) I decided to clear CSS by myself, to do that I would need complete list of classes used on page - how to get complete list of classes used on the page in jQuery?

(Somtehing I could e.g. loop-write into console,... And I am looking rather for a how to do in jQuery than a complete solution (In such things I never belive third-side x) )

4

8 Answers 8

6

jQuery has an attribute selector - choose only elements which have class atribute :) Then split class attribute string (for cases like class="one two") and add them to array (dont forget to check if class is not empty or isnt already in the array. Use this.valueOf() for checking and saving the string :)

var classes = [];
$('[class]').each(function(){
    $($(this).attr('class').split(' ')).each(function() { 
        if (this.length>0 && $.inArray(this.valueOf(), classes) === -1) {
            classes.push(this.valueOf());
        }    
    });
});
console.log("LIST START\n\n"+classes.join('\n')+"\n\nLIST END");

JSFiddle link : http://jsfiddle.net/MWJKL/

1
  • getAttribute('class') works better than attr('class'), when svg elements comes into play
    – Thiyagesh
    Apr 5, 2017 at 12:20
4

Check only elements with the class attribute and split the value so you don't get duplicates

var classes = [];
$('[class]').each(function(){
    $.each($(this).attr('class').split(' '),function(i,className) { 
        if (className.length && $.inArray(className, classes) === -1) {
            classes.push(className);
        }    
    });
});
console.log(classes.join(','));

EDIT Fixed to iterate over an array instead of a jQuery object

5
  • Finally someone who really understood what output do I want :)
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:16
  • @jave.web There is no difference between this snippet and mine.
    – Johan
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:19
  • @Johan true. but this one has less white space ( more readable for me ) sorry :/ I gave you vote up anyway ;)
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:33
  • Found the bug ! :) inArray cant check for the objects, you just need to add JS's native method .valueOf() , because this in final scope is a string :)
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 10:33
  • @jave.web you're right I updated to iterate over the array instead of a jQuery object
    – omma2289
    Aug 7, 2013 at 17:28
3
$(function(){

    var result = [];    

    $('*').each(function(k, v){

        var classNames = $(v).prop('class');

        if(classNames){

            var classes = classNames.split(' ');

            $.each(classes, function(k2, v2){

                if($.inArray(v2, result) === -1)
                    result.push(v2);
            });
        }

    });

    console.log(result);

});

http://jsfiddle.net/ZQZ8j/1/

2
  • This one is really good too (vote up), but there is no need to go through the whole javascript scoping if we have JS native valueOf() :)
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 10:32
  • @jave.web I'm aware that this can be written in a shorter and more optimized way. I wrote it like this because my intention was to make it readable for someone who's not very familiar with jQuery
    – Johan
    Aug 7, 2013 at 10:34
2
jQuery("*").each(function () {
    var thisEl = jQuery(this);
    var thisClass = thisEl.attr("class");
    if (thisClass != undefined) { console.log(thisClass); }
});
1
  • I give you vote up, because its actually working, BUT not correctly it considers more classes in class attribute as one class :)
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:06
2

Try

$(function(){
    var temp = {};    

    $('*').each(function(idx, el){
        var classNames = el.className;
        if(classNames){
            var classes = classNames.split(' ');
            $.each(classes, function(idx, clazz){
                temp[clazz] = true;
            });
        }
    });

    var result = $.map(temp, function(value, key){
        return key;
    })
    console.log(result);

});

Demo: Fiddle

1
  • This one really is good one I just like koala's solution more :) , sad you cant chose second best answer :(
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:29
2

ES6 solution using classList and without jQuery

var classes = []
document.querySelectorAll('[class]').forEach((node) => {
  node.classList.forEach((className) => {
    classes.push(className)
  })
})
console.log(classes)
1
  • Gave upvote for future, but although not explicitly, the question implies unique list (as in accepted answer) - I have a suggestion - what about using even more ES6 - Sets ? Super fast, autounique :-) - developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… , basically using new Set() instead of [] and .add(...) instead of .push(...) should be enough (note that with Sets you DON'T need any uniqueness checking before adding item it does it natively :-) ) Tested, works super fast - jsfiddle.net/w1u8kq4g
    – jave.web
    Jan 5, 2022 at 17:09
1

You can jQuery has attribute selector

$("*[class]").each(function () {
    var classNames = this.attr("class");
    // Split classNames as shown in other answers
});

It will select elements which have the class attribute so no need to add check for undefined.

1
  • You seem to be messed up from other languages - this cant even work because you breaking two things: class is a reserved JavaScript word (cant name variable "classs") and you are calling jquery attr() method on non-jquery object ... you ment this: jsfiddle.net/eUH7N
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:11
0

I think you can use Firefox extension Dust-Me that finds unused CSS selectors.

2
  • 1
    Jave.web wants to use jquery for this.
    – biphobe
    Aug 7, 2013 at 8:50
  • 1
    Sorry but @firian is right, I want to avoid third-party in this case.
    – jave.web
    Aug 7, 2013 at 9:12

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