70

I would like to simulate a whole click not just

document.getElementsByClassName()[0].click();

How do I do that? Search results all seem to be about handling such events, not triggering them.

6
  • you can use document.createEvent("MouseEvents") to simulate a click.
    – dandavis
    Jun 3, 2014 at 22:07
  • I thought this was only for things such as scroll wheel Jun 3, 2014 at 22:13
  • 4
  • I dont understand how its simulating a whole mouse click without mousedown or mouseup =/ I dont know if what im trying to do is pointless or im just going about it the wrong way, basically I have a button that only works on mouseup. Jun 3, 2014 at 22:24
  • 3
    Woo!!! The mozilla dev site did it for me. The key for me was: var simMousedownEvent = new MouseEvent('mousedown', { 'view': window, 'bubbles': true, 'cancelable': true }); $(“input.myelement”)[0].dispatchEvent(simMousedownEvent) The [0] is needed to convert from jQuery object to native JS DOM object.
    – redfox05
    Jul 2, 2015 at 15:36

3 Answers 3

138

Send mouse events. Like so:

//--- Get the first link that has "stackoverflow" in its URL.
var targetNode = document.querySelector ("a[href*='stackoverflow']");
if (targetNode) {
    //--- Simulate a natural mouse-click sequence.
    triggerMouseEvent (targetNode, "mouseover");
    triggerMouseEvent (targetNode, "mousedown");
    triggerMouseEvent (targetNode, "mouseup");
    triggerMouseEvent (targetNode, "click");
}
else
    console.log ("*** Target node not found!");

function triggerMouseEvent (node, eventType) {
    var clickEvent = document.createEvent ('MouseEvents');
    clickEvent.initEvent (eventType, true, true);
    node.dispatchEvent (clickEvent);
}

That works if the web page is statically loaded. If the web page is AJAX-driven, use a technique as in:


Beware:
The question code has an error. You need to pass a class name to that function. Like so:

document.getElementsByClassName ("SomeClassName")[0].click();
9
  • You were not right in the sequence of native event firing. Click event is fired after mouseup. In case of double click the sequence is: mousedown, mouseup, click, mousedown, mouseup, click, dblclick. Be aware when relying on click event there is no builtin mechanism to distinguish between single and double clicks. I've suggested an edit of your answer. I hope you feel comfort with that. Jul 8, 2014 at 4:02
  • As far as I know this behavior isn't very new. Up/down are basic events fired immediately and click or drag are composed when other conditions are matching. mouseup within the same Element the latest mousedown event has been targeted to is considered as click, likewise mousemove over a distance treshold while button is held as drag (when draggeble), similary select. Since mouseup is a hard fact while click is open to interpretation subsequently, this order should also be the expectable one. Jul 8, 2014 at 14:15
  • Your code works perfect even when another methods fails! But please, can you add some code to simulate Shift Click?
    – user90726
    Feb 3, 2016 at 5:22
  • @jsv, See here and here, or open a new question if you need to. Any new question should have an MCVE or link to a target page since the approach can differ based on the page and your end goal. Feb 3, 2016 at 6:07
  • @BrockAdams, so I posted it here. Hope it is not too wordy!
    – user90726
    Feb 3, 2016 at 10:11
22

I improved Brock's code a little after it worked as expected for me.

Definition:

function simulateMouseClick(targetNode) {
    function triggerMouseEvent(targetNode, eventType) {
        var clickEvent = document.createEvent('MouseEvents');
        clickEvent.initEvent(eventType, true, true);
        targetNode.dispatchEvent(clickEvent);
    }
    ["mouseover", "mousedown", "mouseup", "click"].forEach(function(eventType) { 
        triggerMouseEvent(targetNode, eventType);
    });
}

Calling examples:

simulateMouseClick(document);

simulateMouseClick(document.querySelector("a[href*='stackoverflow']"));
8

Bit Optimized

function fireMouseEvents( query, eventNames ){
    var element = document.querySelector(query);
    if(element && eventNames && eventNames.length){
        for(var index in eventNames){
            var eventName = eventNames[index];
            if(element.fireEvent ){
                element.fireEvent( 'on' + eventName );     
            } else {   
                var eventObject = document.createEvent( 'MouseEvents' );
                eventObject.initEvent( eventName, true, false );
                element.dispatchEvent(eventObject);
            }
        }
    }
}

You would fire like this

fireMouseEvents("a[href*='stackoverflow']",['mouseover','mousedown','mouseup','click']);

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