41

Does anyone know a good way to test if one element, stored in a var, is the descendant of another, also stored in a var?

I don't need element1.isChildOf('selector'), that's easy.
I need element1.isChildOf(element2)

element2.find(element1).size() > 0 Does not seem to work.

I don't want to have to write a plugin the uses .each to test each child if I can avoid it.

2
  • If descendant is what you mean please edit the question to clarify.
    – cletus
    Mar 8, 2010 at 2:38
  • This should be protected! Feb 4, 2017 at 11:25

5 Answers 5

72

If you're using 1.4, and are looking for a descendant rather than a child as your find() example implies, there's a has() method:

element2.has(element1).length > 0
6
  • 1
    has() checks works if something is a descendant and not a child as per the title.
    – cletus
    Mar 8, 2010 at 1:46
  • You are correct. The find() example in the question misled me. Clarified. Mar 8, 2010 at 1:54
  • Sorry, Descendant is what I'm after. I'll try this now. Cheers
    – Jake
    Mar 8, 2010 at 2:01
  • 1
    Great, Thanks. I also found I did not need the > 0 since 0 == false
    – Jake
    Mar 8, 2010 at 2:20
  • 1
    @Jake Beware with this asumption, especially with jQuery/-ui. For instance, el.toggleClass('contains', el.has(el2)) would toggle your class with a short animation which could lead to performance problems. If you are using such shortcut out of a boolean context, you have to keep the > 0 part, or cast it to a boolean value, e.g. with !!.
    – Pierre
    Aug 18, 2013 at 6:52
7

You can use index() for this. It will return -1 if an element isn't in the set. Assuming element1 and element2 are DOM elements and not jQuery objects:

if ($(element2).children().index(element1) != -1) {
  // it's a child
}

For completeness, to test if something is a descendant and not just a child, it can also be used for that too:

if ($(element1).parents().index(element2) != -1) {
  // element1 is a descendant of element2
}
1
  • The .parents() solution seems most efficient
    – bobobobo
    Oct 2, 2014 at 2:32
6

As of Jquery 1.6 you can determine whether a jquery object is a child of another jquery object this way:

element2.is(element1.children());

Also notable, since is() now accepts several different arguments (the first argument can be a function, jQuery selector, or DOM element), you can't think of the it simply as "is" anymore, but rather "is or is in".

1

I know this thread is old but this also works if you want to check upwards not downwards:

function isElementChildOf(childElement, parentElement) {
    return 0 !== $(childElement).parents(parentElement).length;
}

Here is a working example

1

This is true if element1 is the child of element2, in other words element1 has a parent, that is element2

$(element1).parents(element2).length 

this way it is not OK, if the parent has more children (let say they are input's):

$(element2).children(element1).length 

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