1

I'm trying to get the URL of a certain image out of the given HTML code

<div class="image_div_name">
    <img src="http://www.thisistheimage.com" alt="">
</div>

So this is my current code that should solve it:

var picture = document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name");
var src = picture[0];

If I now print picture via console.log, I get the correct div:

<div class="image_div_name">
    <img src="http://www.thisistheimage.com" alt="">
</div>

However, if I want to access the src, it doesnt seem to work:

var src = picture[0].src;
console.log(src);

Gives back:

undedfined

If I try:

console.log(picture[0].innerHTML)

it gets better and I receive:

<img src="http://www.thisistheimage.com" alt="">

However I'm looking for way to merely get the URL itself, as in:

http://www.thisistheimage.com

Can you help? What am I doing wrong?

1
  • 1
    document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name").firstElementChild.src
    – jAndy
    Feb 16, 2015 at 21:38

4 Answers 4

5

It's because .image_div_name doesn't have a src attribute, you need to select the child img element.

Given the HTML you provided, you could access it using picture[0].children[0]:

var picture = document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name");
var src = picture[0].children[0].src;

Rather than using picture[0].children[0], you could also use picture[0].firstElementChild to access the first child:

var picture = document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name");
var src = picture[0].firstElementChild.src;

Since neither of the above methods gurentee that an img element will be selected (since you're selecting the first child element), it would probably be better to use something along these lines instead:

var src = document.querySelector('.image_div_name > img').src;

..or:

var picture = document.querySelectorAll(".image_div_name > img");
var src = picture[0].src;
0
4

You are not targeting the img, you are targeting the <div>, which is why the innerHTML property holds the <img> inside. (Images don't have innerHTML).

Select the <img> instead. I've used .querySelectorAll():

var picture = document.querySelectorAll(".image_div_name img");
var src = picture[0];
var src = picture[0].src;
1

You can do this (if you are 100% sure your div only has a child <img>):

var node = document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name");
var src = node[0].children[0].src;
console.log(src);
1

Although Andy's answer is helpful I recommend.

var picture = document.getElementsByClassName("image_div_name")[0].getElementsByTagName("img")[0];
var src = picture.getAttribute('src');

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.