21

I am trying to use the js document.getElementsByClassName to locate an html element, which is actually the header of a table.

For the following codes:

console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader'));

From the Firebug, I can see it log a HTMLCollection, and when I click it, it shows:

-> 0         tr.gtableheader
   length    1

So it do locate the element I want.

But when I using:

console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader').length);

Then output is 0. That's so weird, any ideas about this?

3

6 Answers 6

22

That's because the getElementsByClassName returns a live collection. the length property of the object is 0 because at that point of time there is no element with that className in the DOM. Since the console shows the live representation of an object, it shows all the matching elements when the elements are added to the DOM.

DOM parser parses the documents from top to bottom, when it reaches to a tag, it parses it and adds the DOM representation of it (an instance of HTMLElement interface) to the Document Object Model. You should either move the script tag to the end of body tag or listen to DOMContentLoaded event which is fired when the initial HTML document has been completely loaded and parsed.

2
  • 2
    "That's because the getElementsByClassName returns a LIVE collection" should be written with h1 tag font. It is such an important fact to know.
    – RBT
    May 22, 2021 at 14:55
  • @RBT would you mind explaining why?
    – noob
    Sep 26 at 13:05
6

Using getElementsByClassName() will return all the elements with that class name in a document as a NodeList. This object represents a collection of nodes that can be accessed by index numbers, which starts in 0. In order to access the elements in the NodeList you will have to use a loop.

When you console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader').length); you see 0 because when you run it there is no element with class gtableheader. You are able to see the items in the console because document.getElementsByClassName() returns a live collection that is updated when the new elements are added.

As well, in the code you are using and the length is 0, you can use the code below to access the class name.

document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader')[0].style.color="red";

If you want to access all the elements in the class you can use a for loop.

var x = document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader');
for (var i = 0; i < x.length; i++) {
    x[i].style.color = "red";
}

More information: http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/met_document_getelementsbyclassname.asp

5
  • 21
    this doesn't seem to answer the question. You also reference the length property of the nodeList returned by getElementsByClassName -- you just read it off the variable x you assigned the result to. When I run document.getElementsByClassName('question').length against this very page, which only has a single element with that class, the result is 1. So, you don't provide an answer to why the length property in the OP's question returns 0.
    – Val
    Nov 12, 2015 at 21:25
  • 4
    Yes, actually, the real problem is that I try to access the element before it is loaded, that's why the length is 0.
    – chrisTina
    Nov 13, 2015 at 14:32
  • Another problem is that element does not have a style property. It works, but the IDE keeps complaining that it should be HTMLElement. How to solve this?
    – Kokodoko
    Jun 1, 2018 at 10:29
  • thank, just more the code inside document ready it work. but it is weird in a logic way var xyz= document.getElementsByClassName('xyz'); console.log(xyz); console.log(xyz.length);. I assign to get the group elements first, then read the length of the variable but it still return 0. it is javascript... :)
    – Võ Minh
    Jan 30, 2019 at 4:41
  • Does document.getElementsByClassName create a new HTMLCollection or simply return an existing one? Jul 26, 2021 at 21:11
6

Use this to make it work

window.addEventListener("load", function(event) {
    console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader').length);
});
5

I had a similar problem, but the other answers here didn't lead to my solution. I eventually realized that at the time my code was running, the DOM wasn't yet fully constructed, thus the empty array. What I was seeing in the console, a populated array, was what existed after the DOM was fully formed and the script was complete.

What worked for me was to wrap the code that needed the array within a MutationObserver and set it to watch the hard-coded div containing the sections that would be dynamically generated (see this StackOverflow answer and the MDN documentation).

Try this:

var divArray = document.getElementById('hardCodedContainer');

var observer = new MutationObserver(function(){
   console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader').length);
   console.log(document.getElementsByClassName('gtableheader'));
};

observer.observe(divArray, { attributes: false, childList: true, subtree: true });

// When you've got what you need, you should call this function to trigger a disconnect 
function classesFound(){
   observer.disconnect();
};
0

I had this problem asking for the elements just after its dynamic creation, fixed with setTiemout()

1
  • 3
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Apr 15, 2022 at 20:46
0

Simply place your <script> tag before </body>

If <script> tag is not added at end of the <body> tag, DOM may not be ready by that time, thus preventing javascript to work on it, leading to unknown behaviors

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