350

I'm currently trying to write some JavaScript to get the attribute of the class that has been clicked. I know that to do this the correct way, I should use an event listener. My code is as follows:

var classname = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");

var myFunction = function() {
    var attribute = this.getAttribute("data-myattribute");
    alert(attribute);
};

classname.addEventListener('click', myFunction(), false);

I was expecting to get an alert box every time I clicked on one of the classes to tell me the attribute but unfortunately this does not work. Can anyone help please?

(Note - I can quite easily do this in jQuery but I would NOT like to use it)

1
  • 3
    There's a problem with the code that's adding the event listener. addEventListener takes the event name ('click'), reference to the function (not the result of the function as it is now by calling myFunction() with parens) and a flag to indicate event bubbling. The addEventListener call should look like: elem.addEventListener('click', myFunction, false) and classname is a NodeList type. Need to loop over all the elements and attach the listener to each one in the list. Mar 23, 2015 at 3:03

8 Answers 8

596

This should work. getElementsByClassName returns an Array-like object (see below) of the elements matching the criteria.

var elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");

var myFunction = function() {
    var attribute = this.getAttribute("data-myattribute");
    alert(attribute);
};

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

jQuery does the looping part for you, which you need to do in plain JavaScript.

If you have ES6 support you can replace your last line with:

    Array.from(elements).forEach(function(element) {
      element.addEventListener('click', myFunction);
    });

Note: Older browsers (like IE6, IE7, IE8) don´t support getElementsByClassName and so they return undefined.


Details on getElementsByClassName

getElementsByClassName doesn't return an array, but a HTMLCollection in most, or a NodeList in some browsers (Mozilla ref). Both of these types are Array-Like, (meaning that they have a length property and the objects can be accessed via their index), but are not strictly an Array or inherited from an Array (meaning other methods that can be performed on an Array cannot be performed on these types).

Thanks to user @Nemo for pointing this out and having me dig in to fully understand.

10
  • 11
    This works perfectly. Thank you. I actually didn't realise that jQuery did the looping. Great help Anudeep. Here's your working answer: jsfiddle.net/LWda3/2 Oct 29, 2013 at 10:33
  • 2
    document.getElementsByClassName actually always return an array, even if only one element matches the criteria Oct 29, 2013 at 10:39
  • 15
    stackoverflow.com/a/13258908/1333493 "document.getElementsByClassName does not return an array. It returns a node list which is traversed like an XML file."
    – Nemo
    Sep 24, 2015 at 10:20
  • 11
    Array.from() has a second parameter which is a map function so the above (assuming es6 support) could be written Array.from(classname, c => c.addEventListener('click', myFunction));.
    – Kilmazing
    Jan 5, 2017 at 20:34
  • 1
    Better attach event to a parent and delegates it in place to attach it to every single element.
    – Salvio
    Aug 2, 2023 at 8:09
64

With modern JavaScript it can be done like this:

const divs = document.querySelectorAll('.a');

divs.forEach(el => el.addEventListener('click', event => {
  console.log(event.target.getAttribute("data-el"));
}));
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
  <meta charset="utf-8">
  <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width">
  <title>Example</title>
  <style>
    .a {
      background-color:red;
      height: 33px;
      display: flex;
      align-items: center;
      margin-bottom: 10px;
      cursor: pointer;
    }
    
    .b {
      background-color:#00AA00;
      height: 50px;
      display: flex;
      align-items: center;
      margin-bottom: 10px;
    }
  </style>
</head>
<body>
  <div class="a" data-el="1">1</div>
  <div class="b" data-el="no-click-handler">2</div>
  <div class="a" data-el="3">11</div>
</body>
</html>

  1. Gets all elements by class name
  2. Loops over all elements with using forEach
  3. Attach an event listener on each element
  4. Uses event.target to retrieve more information for specific element
2
  • This is what I used, but I can't vote this answer as useful since you deviated away from what the function in the question is trying to do. You should really update your answer to pull the data attribute value rather than a class name.
    – Mark
    Jan 12, 2021 at 16:02
  • @Mark Thank you :) I have updated as you required. Have a nice day!
    – V. Sambor
    Jan 12, 2021 at 17:28
26

You can use the code below:

document.body.addEventListener('click', function (evt) {
    if (evt.target.className === 'databox') {
        alert(this)
    }
}, false);
11
  • 1
    I'll have to give this a try, it's a unique approach which might actually be easier to maintain and perform better than looping! Mar 2, 2019 at 17:13
  • 9
    if the element has multiple classes, you would have to check for the correct value in that fields eg. classes and order. i'd rather go for evt.target.classList.contains('databox')
    – honk31
    Mar 6, 2019 at 10:50
  • 12
    This seems wildly inefficient to me. Every single event on the body would go through this function. What's so hard to maintain about a loop?
    – JosefAssad
    Jul 28, 2019 at 18:20
  • 7
    I fully disagree with everybody here. If you use element.addEventListener('click', event => { } to add the event to the element, the javascript will check every click internally anyway. If you add the event to all element of classes Javascript will run equivalent check instances for every single click, while the above approach will only look once for every single click.
    – Thanasis
    Jan 6, 2021 at 16:15
  • 2
    @GabrielSalinasSzada I really like this approach when inefficiency is a concern, personally.
    – BobRodes
    Aug 23, 2022 at 14:40
24

* This was edited to allow for children of the target class to trigger the events. See bottom of the answer for details. *

An alternative answer to add an event listener to a class where items are frequently being added and removed. This is inspired by jQuery's on function where you can pass in a selector for a child element that the event is listening on.

var base = document.querySelector('#base'); // the container for the variable content
var selector = '.card'; // any css selector for children

base.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
  // find the closest parent of the event target that
  // matches the selector
  var closest = event.target.closest(selector);
  if (closest && base.contains(closest)) {
    // handle class event
  }
});

Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/u6oje7af/94/

This will listen for clicks on children of the base element and if the target of a click has a parent matching the selector, the class event will be handled. You can add and remove elements as you like without having to add more click listeners to the individual elements. This will catch them all even for elements added after this listener was added, just like the jQuery functionality (which I imagine is somewhat similar under the hood).

This depends on the events propagating, so if you stopPropagation on the event somewhere else, this may not work. Also, the closest function has some compatibility issues with IE apparently (what doesn't?).

This could be made into a function if you need to do this type of action listening repeatedly, like

function addChildEventListener(base, eventName, selector, handler) {
  base.addEventListener(eventName, function(event) {
    var closest = event.target.closest(selector);
    if (closest && base.contains(closest)) {
      // passes the event to the handler and sets `this`
      // in the handler as the closest parent matching the
      // selector from the target element of the event
      handler.call(closest, event);
    }
  });
}

=========================================
EDIT: This post originally used the matches function for DOM elements on the event target, but this restricted the targets of events to the direct class only. It has been updated to use the closest function instead, allowing for events on children of the desired class to trigger the events as well. The original matches code can be found at the original fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/u6oje7af/23/

4

Yow can use querySelectorAll to select all the classes and loop through them to assign the eventListener. The if condition checks if it contains the class name.

const arrClass = document.querySelectorAll(".className");
for (let i of arrClass) {
  i.addEventListener("click", (e) => {
    if (e.target.classList.contains("className")) {
        console.log("Perfrom Action")
    }
  })
}
1
  • 1
    Unless you suspect the className to dynamically change, you shouldn't have to recheck the className of the even target.
    – CopyJosh
    Dec 1, 2020 at 20:34
2

All the above-mentioned answers are correct and I just want to demonstrate another short way

document.querySelectorAll('.classname').forEach( button => {
    button.onclick = function () {
    // rest of code
    }
});
1
  • This is a great solution Short and focused on the task at hand.
    – PromInc
    Feb 27 at 12:15
0

Also consider that if you click a button, the target of the event listener is not necessaily the button itself, but whatever content inside the button you clicked on. You can reference the element to which you assigned the listener using the currentTarget property. Here is a pretty solution in modern ES using a single statement:

    document.querySelectorAll(".myClassName").forEach(i => i.addEventListener(
        "click",
        e => {
            alert(e.currentTarget.dataset.myDataContent);
        }));
0

Here's a different approach for many DOM elements with the same class name by selecting path key in the eventListener object.

Add an event listener to the immediate parent class wrapping all the child elements with the same class and get the path by selecting the first key in the event object.

E.g say you want to edit table cells of a table

    //Select tbody element & add  event listener
    let tbody = document.querySelector('tbody');

    tbody.addEventListener("click", function(e,v) {
    // Get the clicked cell
    let cell = e.path[0];
    // Get the current cell value
    let cellValue = cell.innerHTML;
    //Rest of code goes here
    }
        

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