528

I'm working on an Extension in Chrome, and I'm wondering: what's the best way to find out when an element comes into existence? Using plain javascript, with an interval that checks until an element exists, or does jQuery have some easy way to do this?

5
  • 1
    Looks like every single option here today (including from comments) is either outdated or incomplete. They don't consider @hughsk's awesome input fully, the compatibility argument. Meanwhile I'd recommend simply using Brandon's update on Ryan's answer for general simplicity and less risk of overhead, I suppose.
    – cregox
    Commented Apr 1, 2015 at 23:17
  • 6
    MutationObserver > DOM Mutation Events > setTimeout.
    – mattsven
    Commented Apr 2, 2015 at 15:28
  • 3
    Not from where I stand. setTimeout is compatible, simple to implement, simple to maintain, and has negligible overhead.
    – cregox
    Commented Apr 2, 2015 at 16:07
  • setTimeout + jQuery is less than ideal in my opinion for two reasons: 1.) jQuery bloat 2.) you're needlessly manually querying the DOM for elements, events beat that speed-wise easily, 3.) it will always be slower than any native implementation. If you need to do anything based on the presence of an element reasonably quickly, especially if seamless user experience is your goal, it is inferior.
    – mattsven
    Commented Apr 2, 2015 at 19:21
  • That said, that is why I dislike it. The other solutions are more robust, immediate, less likely to break or suffer from bugs, and most importantly more detailed as to what changes occurred. If you are working in a situation where you have complete control or only need DOM change updates for simple, uncomplicated elements hierarchies it's probably great.
    – mattsven
    Commented Apr 2, 2015 at 19:23

31 Answers 31

689
+100

Here is a simple solution using the MutationObserver api.

  1. No jQuery
  2. No Timer
  3. No third party libraries
  4. Promise based and works well with async/await

I have used it in several projects.

function waitForElm(selector) {
    return new Promise(resolve => {
        if (document.querySelector(selector)) {
            return resolve(document.querySelector(selector));
        }

        const observer = new MutationObserver(mutations => {
            if (document.querySelector(selector)) {
                observer.disconnect();
                resolve(document.querySelector(selector));
            }
        });

        // If you get "parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'" error, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/77855838/492336
        observer.observe(document.body, {
            childList: true,
            subtree: true
        });
    });
}

To use it:

waitForElm('.some-class').then((elm) => {
    console.log('Element is ready');
    console.log(elm.textContent);
});

Or with async/await:

const elm = await waitForElm('.some-class');
18
  • 17
    This is neat! The cool part about it is that you could use it with async / await too. You might also be able squeeze more performance out of it by doing mutations.addedNodes.find(node => node.matchesSelector("..."))
    – mattsven
    Commented Apr 29, 2020 at 21:37
  • 4
    @RalphDavidAbernathy, you are right, the mutations param is not used in the code and can be safely deleted. It has a lot of useful information on what is mutated. I put it there just in case you need to access it.
    – Yong Wang
    Commented Oct 22, 2021 at 16:59
  • 2
    This function is checking the item coming in DOM for first time, how to check if item coming more times, so every time it should run, Commented Apr 5, 2022 at 4:21
  • 2
    This appears to override any other code that monitors the targeted element(s) for events. I have a page where I'm trying to watch for changes to an input based on other code that I do not control (within my own user script, monitoring a form from a website, conditionally applying formatting). The above code causes the page's own JS to cease functioning for the targeted element(s). Is there any way to monitor an element, without clobbering any existing event watchers? Perhaps similar to jQuery's noConflict()? Commented Apr 26, 2022 at 19:56
  • 3
    @Julix, the if-return statement is an optimization for the case that the element if already present when you call this function. The promise will be resolved directly without having to mess with MutationObserver
    – Yong Wang
    Commented Dec 5, 2022 at 2:41
235

DOMNodeInserted is being deprecated, along with the other DOM mutation events, because of performance issues - the recommended approach is to use a MutationObserver to watch the DOM. It's only supported in newer browsers though, so you should fall back onto DOMNodeInserted when MutationObserver isn't available.

let observer = new MutationObserver((mutations) => {
  mutations.forEach((mutation) => {
    if (!mutation.addedNodes) return

    for (let i = 0; i < mutation.addedNodes.length; i++) {
      // do things to your newly added nodes here
      let node = mutation.addedNodes[i]
    }
  })
})

observer.observe(document.body, {
    childList: true
  , subtree: true
  , attributes: false
  , characterData: false
})

// stop watching using:
observer.disconnect()
6
  • 76
    I've always found MutationObserver api a bit complex so I've built a library, arrive.js, to provide a simpler api to listen for elements creation/removal. Commented Apr 17, 2014 at 18:23
  • 24
    I recommend using @UzairFarooq excellent library github.com/uzairfarooq/arrive
    – Dennis
    Commented Jul 14, 2014 at 15:13
  • As noted, MutationObservers don't work in IE10 or below. I believe part of Web Components has made a polyfill for IE9 support here.
    – aug
    Commented Nov 23, 2014 at 9:31
  • 5
    Two things to note: (1) It would be better to do if (mutation.addedNodes.length) since if (mutation.addedNodes) would still return true even if it's an empty array. (2) You can't do mutation.addedNodes.forEach() because addedNodes is a nodeList and you can't iterate through a nodeList with forEach. For a solution to this, see toddmotto.com/ditch-the-array-foreach-call-nodelist-hack
    – thdoan
    Commented Jan 15, 2015 at 4:57
  • Just encapsulated answer to jQuery plugin available via Bower. github.com/janmisek/jquery.elementReady Commented Mar 7, 2015 at 11:13
135

Here is a core JavaScript function to wait for the display of an element (well, its insertion into the DOM to be more accurate).

// Call the below function
waitForElementToDisplay("#div1",function(){alert("Hi");},1000,9000);

function waitForElementToDisplay(selector, callback, checkFrequencyInMs, timeoutInMs) {
  var startTimeInMs = Date.now();
  (function loopSearch() {
    if (document.querySelector(selector) != null) {
      callback();
      return;
    }
    else {
      setTimeout(function () {
        if (timeoutInMs && Date.now() - startTimeInMs > timeoutInMs)
          return;
        loopSearch();
      }, checkFrequencyInMs);
    }
  })();
}

This call will look for the HTML tag whose id="div1" every 1000 milliseconds. If the element is found, it will display an alert message Hi. If no element is found after 9000 milliseconds, this function stops its execution.

Parameters:

  1. selector: String : This function looks for the element ${selector}.
  2. callback: Function : This is a function that will be called if the element is found.
  3. checkFrequencyInMs: Number : This function checks whether this element exists every ${checkFrequencyInMs} milliseconds.
  4. timeoutInMs : Number : Optional. This function stops looking for the element after ${timeoutInMs} milliseconds.

NB : Selectors are explained at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Document/querySelector

10
121

I was having this same problem, so I went ahead and wrote a plugin for it.

$(selector).waitUntilExists(function);

Code:

;(function ($, window) {

var intervals = {};
var removeListener = function(selector) {

    if (intervals[selector]) {

        window.clearInterval(intervals[selector]);
        intervals[selector] = null;
    }
};
var found = 'waitUntilExists.found';

/**
 * @function
 * @property {object} jQuery plugin which runs handler function once specified
 *           element is inserted into the DOM
 * @param {function|string} handler 
 *            A function to execute at the time when the element is inserted or 
 *            string "remove" to remove the listener from the given selector
 * @param {bool} shouldRunHandlerOnce 
 *            Optional: if true, handler is unbound after its first invocation
 * @example jQuery(selector).waitUntilExists(function);
 */

$.fn.waitUntilExists = function(handler, shouldRunHandlerOnce, isChild) {

    var selector = this.selector;
    var $this = $(selector);
    var $elements = $this.not(function() { return $(this).data(found); });

    if (handler === 'remove') {

        // Hijack and remove interval immediately if the code requests
        removeListener(selector);
    }
    else {

        // Run the handler on all found elements and mark as found
        $elements.each(handler).data(found, true);

        if (shouldRunHandlerOnce && $this.length) {

            // Element was found, implying the handler already ran for all 
            // matched elements
            removeListener(selector);
        }
        else if (!isChild) {

            // If this is a recurring search or if the target has not yet been 
            // found, create an interval to continue searching for the target
            intervals[selector] = window.setInterval(function () {

                $this.waitUntilExists(handler, shouldRunHandlerOnce, true);
            }, 500);
        }
    }

    return $this;
};

}(jQuery, window));
11
  • 6
    Thank you for the plugin. I forked and improved it a bit. Feel free to take whatever you want from my update. I have a few more improvements planned, still: updated plugin Commented Jun 4, 2013 at 21:46
  • 13
    would be nice without jquery dep too... ;)
    – knutole
    Commented Jul 25, 2013 at 15:30
  • 5
    maybe you should mention how it works: it works by asking every 500 ms if the element exists (using a window.setInterval). I don't know if the MutationObserver answer works by polling as well...
    – sports
    Commented Mar 30, 2015 at 21:18
  • 2
    It does not work properly if the element is already on the page. Here is the proper version of this function: gist.github.com/PizzaBrandon/5709010 Commented Feb 24, 2016 at 7:09
  • 2
    Can you please explain what is the use of ; in the beginning of the function ( ;(function ($, window) { ) ?
    – mrid
    Commented Dec 23, 2016 at 10:36
55

I used this approach to wait for an element to appear so I can execute the other functions after that.

Let's say doTheRestOfTheStuff(parameters) function should only be called after the element with ID the_Element_ID appears or finished loading, we can use,

var existCondition = setInterval(function() {
 if ($('#the_Element_ID').length) {
    console.log("Exists!");
    clearInterval(existCondition);
    doTheRestOfTheStuff(parameters);
 }
}, 100); // check every 100ms
0
30

Update

Below there is an updated version that works with promises. It also "stops" if a specific number of tries is reached.

function _waitForElement(selector, delay = 50, tries = 100) {
    const element = document.querySelector(selector);

    if (!window[`__${selector}`]) {
      window[`__${selector}`] = 0;
      window[`__${selector}__delay`] = delay;
      window[`__${selector}__tries`] = tries;
    }

    function _search() {
      return new Promise((resolve) => {
        window[`__${selector}`]++;
        setTimeout(resolve, window[`__${selector}__delay`]);
      });
    }

    if (element === null) {
      if (window[`__${selector}`] >= window[`__${selector}__tries`]) {
        window[`__${selector}`] = 0;
        return Promise.resolve(null);
      }

      return _search().then(() => _waitForElement(selector));
    } else {
      return Promise.resolve(element);
    }
  }

Usage is very simple, to use it with await just make sure you're within an async function:

const start = (async () => {
  const $el = await _waitForElement(`.my-selector`);
  console.log($el);
})();

Outdated version

Simply add the selector you want. Once the element is found you can have access to in the callback function.

const waitUntilElementExists = (selector, callback) => {
const el = document.querySelector(selector);

if (el){
    return callback(el);
}

setTimeout(() => waitUntilElementExists(selector, callback), 500);
}

waitUntilElementExists('.wait-for-me', (el) => console.log(el));
4
  • 3
    This answer works on IE8-10 as well as modern browsers. The main problem is that it will keep running if the element does not exist - so its best when are you are sure the element is going to be there. Otherwise, you could add a counter. Commented Aug 17, 2019 at 16:54
  • 1
    You were down voted most likely because similar answers exists here and they were posted in 2012 and 2015 e.g. stackoverflow.com/a/29754070/2103767
    – bhantol
    Commented Nov 19, 2019 at 15:51
  • 2
    They were similar, not identical. Furthermore, many people are doing the same. Lastly, I coded this solution myself. That is a poor reasoning, however, if even it was indeed the case, I'd appreciate a comment letting me know. The answer solves OP's issue and has no apparent motives to be downvoted. Commented Nov 19, 2019 at 19:26
  • Your "_waitForElement" function works beautifully. I'm running javascripts in the console and must wait for elements to appear before trying to click them or get their innertext. But it only works great for elements that have an ID. I'm trying to figure out how to adapt it to looping through an array of elements by className to wait until a particular element by innerText exists. The className I'm working with now has 13 different elements. I need to click on one of them. Any suggestions how to modify your function to wait for the element to exist before clicking Commented Sep 25, 2023 at 12:59
29

I think that still there isnt any answer here with easy and readable working example. Use MutationObserver interface to detect DOM changes, like this:

var observer = new MutationObserver(function(mutations) {
    if ($("p").length) {
        console.log("Exist, lets do something");
        observer.disconnect(); 
        //We can disconnect observer once the element exist if we dont want observe more changes in the DOM
    }
});

// Start observing
observer.observe(document.body, { //document.body is node target to observe
    childList: true, //This is a must have for the observer with subtree
    subtree: true //Set to true if changes must also be observed in descendants.
});
            
$(document).ready(function() {
    $("button").on("click", function() {
        $("p").remove();
        setTimeout(function() {
            $("#newContent").append("<p>New element</p>");
        }, 2000);
    });
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<button>New content</button>
<div id="newContent"></div>

Note: Spanish Mozilla docs about MutationObserver are more detailed if you want more information.

1
  • 2
    Didn't downvoted, but in 2024 this would be a much better answer without jQuery dependencies. Commented Mar 2 at 2:57
26

You can do

$('#yourelement').ready(function() {

});

Please note that this will only work if the element is present in the DOM when being requested from the server. If the element is being dynamically added via JavaScript, it will not work and you may need to look at the other answers.

6
  • 9
    The .ready() function works for most anything (if not anything), not just document. It just won't work with dynamically created elements, even on .live(). Commented Apr 2, 2011 at 18:47
  • 8
    @Bery, as Richard pointed out, this works only for elements which are already present in the HTML when it's first requested from the server. If Javascript is used to add an element dynamically to the DOM, it doesn't work. Commented Jan 30, 2013 at 12:11
  • 6
    @Sam, can you please clarify how to attach it to the reference of the element in memory? Commented Feb 19, 2014 at 17:48
  • 5
    This answer is incorrect. What you're actually checking here is a regular $(document).ready(), not the element you think it will apply too. That's just how this special listener works. Example
    – Shikkediel
    Commented Feb 2, 2016 at 18:34
  • 2
    This usage is not recommended according to api.jquery.com/ready
    – splintor
    Commented Jan 10, 2018 at 7:37
25

You can listen to DOMNodeInserted or DOMSubtreeModified events which fire whenever a new element is added to the DOM.

There is also LiveQuery jQuery plugin which would detect when a new element is created:

$("#future_element").livequery(function(){
    //element created
});
3
  • 1
    Very nice plugin! Is there any function like that in jquery directly? I'm wondering that there is no existing feature to do that. And if this is THE plugin, please vote up for this answer ;) For me, it works perfectly. Thank you very much.
    – Samuel
    Commented Aug 10, 2012 at 20:35
  • 1
    Note IE 9 implements DOMNodeInserted but has a major bug where it won't fire when you add an element for the time, which is most of the time when you'd want to use it. Details are at: help.dottoro.com/ljmcxjla.php Commented Dec 3, 2012 at 11:48
  • DOMSubtreeModified is deprecated in favor of the Mutation Observer API Commented Jan 7, 2022 at 3:08
18

For a simple approach using jQuery I've found this to work well:

  // Wait for element to exist.
  function elementLoaded(el, cb) {
    if ($(el).length) {
      // Element is now loaded.
      cb($(el));
    } else {
      // Repeat every 500ms.
      setTimeout(function() {
        elementLoaded(el, cb)
      }, 500);
    }
  };

  elementLoaded('.element-selector', function(el) {
    // Element is ready to use.
    el.click(function() {
      alert("You just clicked a dynamically inserted element");
    });
  });

Here we simply check every 500ms to see whether the element is loaded, when it is, we can use it.

This is especially useful for adding click handlers to elements which have been dynamically added to the document.

10

Here's a function that acts as a thin wrapper around MutationObserver. The only requirement is that the browser support MutationObserver; there is no dependency on JQuery. Run the snippet below to see a working example.

function waitForMutation(parentNode, isMatchFunc, handlerFunc, observeSubtree, disconnectAfterMatch) {
  var defaultIfUndefined = function(val, defaultVal) {
    return (typeof val === "undefined") ? defaultVal : val;
  };

  observeSubtree = defaultIfUndefined(observeSubtree, false);
  disconnectAfterMatch = defaultIfUndefined(disconnectAfterMatch, false);

  var observer = new MutationObserver(function(mutations) {
    mutations.forEach(function(mutation) {
      if (mutation.addedNodes) {
        for (var i = 0; i < mutation.addedNodes.length; i++) {
          var node = mutation.addedNodes[i];
          if (isMatchFunc(node)) {
            handlerFunc(node);
            if (disconnectAfterMatch) observer.disconnect();
          };
        }
      }
    });
  });

  observer.observe(parentNode, {
    childList: true,
    attributes: false,
    characterData: false,
    subtree: observeSubtree
  });
}

// Example
waitForMutation(
  // parentNode: Root node to observe. If the mutation you're looking for
  // might not occur directly below parentNode, pass 'true' to the
  // observeSubtree parameter.
  document.getElementById("outerContent"),
  // isMatchFunc: Function to identify a match. If it returns true,
  // handlerFunc will run.
  // MutationObserver only fires once per mutation, not once for every node
  // inside the mutation. If the element we're looking for is a child of
  // the newly-added element, we need to use something like
  // node.querySelector() to find it.
  function(node) {
    return node.querySelector(".foo") !== null;
  },
  // handlerFunc: Handler.
  function(node) {
    var elem = document.createElement("div");
    elem.appendChild(document.createTextNode("Added node (" + node.innerText + ")"));
    document.getElementById("log").appendChild(elem);
  },
  // observeSubtree
  true,
  // disconnectAfterMatch: If this is true the hanlerFunc will only run on
  // the first time that isMatchFunc returns true. If it's false, the handler
  // will continue to fire on matches.
  false);

// Set up UI. Using JQuery here for convenience.

$outerContent = $("#outerContent");
$innerContent = $("#innerContent");

$("#addOuter").on("click", function() {
  var newNode = $("<div><span class='foo'>Outer</span></div>");
  $outerContent.append(newNode);
});
$("#addInner").on("click", function() {
  var newNode = $("<div><span class='foo'>Inner</span></div>");
  $innerContent.append(newNode);
});
.content {
  padding: 1em;
  border: solid 1px black;
  overflow-y: auto;
}
#innerContent {
  height: 100px;
}
#outerContent {
  height: 200px;
}
#log {
  font-family: Courier;
  font-size: 10pt;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<h2>Create some mutations</h2>
<div id="main">
  <button id="addOuter">Add outer node</button>
  <button id="addInner">Add inner node</button>
  <div class="content" id="outerContent">
    <div class="content" id="innerContent"></div>
  </div>
</div>
<h2>Log</h2>
<div id="log"></div>

10

How about the insertionQuery library?

insertionQuery uses CSS Animation callbacks attached to the selector(s) specified to run a callback when an element is created. This method allows callbacks to be run whenever an element is created, not just the first time.

From github:

Non-dom-event way to catch nodes showing up. And it uses selectors.

It's not just for wider browser support, It can be better than DOMMutationObserver for certain things.

Why?

  • Because DOM Events slow down the browser and insertionQuery doesn't
  • Because DOM Mutation Observer has less browser support than insertionQuery
  • Because with insertionQuery you can filter DOM changes using selectors without performance overhead!

Widespread support!

IE10+ and mostly anything else (including mobile)

0
9

You can try this:

const wait_until_element_appear = setInterval(() => {
    if ($(element).length !== 0) {
        // some code
        clearInterval(wait_until_element_appear);
    }
}, 0);

This solution works very good for me

1
  • 3
    Clean and concise. You may want to increase the interval ie. to 500ms, and maybe add a retry counter to avoid infinite loop.
    – m3nda
    Commented Jul 5, 2021 at 10:33
8

Here's a Promise-returning solution in vanilla Javascript (no messy callbacks). By default it checks every 200ms.

function waitFor(selector) {
    return new Promise(function (res, rej) {
        waitForElementToDisplay(selector, 200);
        function waitForElementToDisplay(selector, time) {
            if (document.querySelector(selector) != null) {
                res(document.querySelector(selector));
            }
            else {
                setTimeout(function () {
                    waitForElementToDisplay(selector, time);
                }, time);
            }
        }
    });
}
7

Here's a pure Javascript function which allows you to wait for anything. Set the interval longer to take less CPU resource.

/**
 * @brief Wait for something to be ready before triggering a timeout
 * @param {callback} isready Function which returns true when the thing we're waiting for has happened
 * @param {callback} success Function to call when the thing is ready
 * @param {callback} error Function to call if we time out before the event becomes ready
 * @param {int} count Number of times to retry the timeout (default 300 or 6s)
 * @param {int} interval Number of milliseconds to wait between attempts (default 20ms)
 */
function waitUntil(isready, success, error, count, interval){
    if (count === undefined) {
        count = 300;
    }
    if (interval === undefined) {
        interval = 20;
    }
    if (isready()) {
        success();
        return;
    }
    // The call back isn't ready. We need to wait for it
    setTimeout(function(){
        if (!count) {
            // We have run out of retries
            if (error !== undefined) {
                error();
            }
        } else {
            // Try again
            waitUntil(isready, success, error, count -1, interval);
        }
    }, interval);
}

To call this, for example in jQuery, use something like:

waitUntil(function(){
    return $('#myelement').length > 0;
}, function(){
    alert("myelement now exists");
}, function(){
    alert("I'm bored. I give up.");
});
7

The observe function below will allow you to listen to elements via a selector.

In the following example, after 2 seconds have passed, a .greeting will be inserted into the .container. Since we are listening to the insertion of this element, we can have a callback that triggers upon insertion.

const observe = (selector, callback, targetNode = document.body) =>
  new MutationObserver(mutations => [...mutations]
    .flatMap((mutation) => [...mutation.addedNodes])
    .filter((node) => node.matches && node.matches(selector))
    .forEach(callback))
  .observe(targetNode, { childList: true, subtree: true });

const createGreeting = () => {
  const el = document.createElement('DIV');
  el.textContent = 'Hello World';
  el.classList.add('greeting');
  return el;
};

const container = document.querySelector('.container');

observe('.greeting', el => console.log('I have arrived!', el), container);

new Promise(res => setTimeout(() => res(createGreeting()), 2000))
  .then(el => container.appendChild(el));
html, body { width: 100%; height: 100%; margin: 0; padding: 0; }
body { display: flex; }
.container { display: flex; flex: 1; align-items: center; justify-content: center; }
.greeting { font-weight: bold; font-size: 2em; }
<div class="container"></div>


Update

Here is an experimental async/await example.

const sleep = (ms) => new Promise((res) => setTimeout(res, ms));

const observe = (selector, targetNode = document.body) =>
  new Promise(res => {
    new MutationObserver(mutations =>
      res([...mutations]
        .flatMap((mutation) => [...mutation.addedNodes])
        .find((node) => node.matches && node.matches(selector))))
    .observe(targetNode, { childList: true, subtree: true });
  });

const createGreeting = () => {
  const el = document.createElement('DIV');
  el.textContent = 'Hello World';
  el.classList.add('greeting');
  return el;
};

const container = document.querySelector('.container');

observe('.greeting', container)
  .then(el => console.log('I have arrived!', el));

(async () => {
  await sleep(2000);
  container.appendChild(createGreeting());
})();
html, body { width: 100%; height: 100%; margin: 0; padding: 0; }
body { display: flex; }
.container { display: flex; flex: 1; align-items: center; justify-content: center; }
.greeting { font-weight: bold; font-size: 2em; }
<div class="container"></div>

0
6

I usually use this snippet for Tag Manager:

<script>
(function exists() {
  if (!document.querySelector('<selector>')) {
    return setTimeout(exists);
  }
  // code when element exists
})();  
</script>
4

This is a better version written on top of Yong Wang's answer (highest scored answer).

Added feature: you can wait for an element for a particular amount of time with location precision to increase performance.

async function waitForElement(selector, timeout = null, location = document.body) {
    return new Promise((resolve) => {
        let element = document.querySelector(selector);
        if (element) {
            return resolve(element);
        }

        const observer = new MutationObserver(async () => {
            let element = document.querySelector(selector);
            if (element) {
                resolve(element);
                observer.disconnect();
            } else {
                if (timeout) {
                    async function timeOver() {
                        return new Promise((resolve) => {
                            setTimeout(() => {
                                observer.disconnect();
                                resolve(false);
                            }, timeout);
                        });
                    }
                    resolve(await timeOver());
                }
            }
        });

        observer.observe(location, {
            childList: true,
            subtree: true,
        });
    });
}

Usage:

await waitForElement(".nav-alt", 500, ".main-body")

Bonus: Wait for a element to disappear from DOM.

async function waitForElementDeath(selector, location = document.body) {
    return new Promise((resolve) => {
        const observer = new MutationObserver(async () => {
            if (!document.querySelector(selector)) {
                resolve(true);
                observer.disconnect();
            }
        });

        observer.observe(location, {
            childList: true,
            subtree: true,
        });
    });
}

Usage:

await waitForElementDeath(".Popup-div", "Popup-Container")
0
3

A cleaner example using MutationObserver:

new MutationObserver( mutation => {
    if (!mutation.addedNodes) return
    mutation.addedNodes.forEach( node => {
        // do stuff with node
    })
})
1
  • This is not cleaner, it's just incomplete code. Commented Mar 2 at 20:45
3

A solution returning a Promise and allowing to use a timeout (compatible IE 11+).

For a single element (type Element):

"use strict";

function waitUntilElementLoaded(selector) {
    var timeout = arguments.length > 1 && arguments[1] !== undefined ? arguments[1] : 0;

    var start = performance.now();
    var now = 0;

    return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
        var interval = setInterval(function () {
            var element = document.querySelector(selector);

            if (element instanceof Element) {
                clearInterval(interval);

                resolve();
            }

            now = performance.now();

            if (now - start >= timeout) {
                reject("Could not find the element " + selector + " within " + timeout + " ms");
            }
        }, 100);
    });
}

For multiple elements (type NodeList):

"use strict";

function waitUntilElementsLoaded(selector) {
    var timeout = arguments.length > 1 && arguments[1] !== undefined ? arguments[1] : 0;

    var start = performance.now();
    var now = 0;

    return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
        var interval = setInterval(function () {
            var elements = document.querySelectorAll(selector);

            if (elements instanceof NodeList) {
                clearInterval(interval);

                resolve(elements);
            }

            now = performance.now();

            if (now - start >= timeout) {
                reject("Could not find elements " + selector + " within " + timeout + " ms");
            }
        }, 100);
    });
}

Examples:

waitUntilElementLoaded('#message', 800).then(function(element) {
    // element found and available

    element.innerHTML = '...';
}).catch(function() {
    // element not found within 800 milliseconds
});

waitUntilElementsLoaded('.message', 10000).then(function(elements) {
    for(const element of elements) {
        // ....
    }
}).catch(function(error) {
    // elements not found withing 10 seconds
});

Works for both a list of elements and a single element.

2
  • 1
    My favorite solution! Why check element instanceof HTMLElement? Can it ever be anything other than null or HTMLElement?
    – Leeroy
    Commented Nov 14, 2019 at 17:59
  • 1
    You raise an interesting point. I should have make it broader by using Element instead (fixed). I just make the check because I want to be sure the variable element has the property innerHTML as the Element MDN documentation states. Feel free to remove it if you do not care about it!
    – Anwar
    Commented Nov 14, 2019 at 22:14
3

I have developed an answer inspired by Jamie Hutber's.

It's a promise based function where you can set:

  • maximum number of tries - default 10;
  • delay in milliseconds - default 100 ms.

Therefore, by default, it will wait 1 second until the element appears on the DOM.

If it does not show up it will return a promise.reject with null so you can handle the error as per your wish.

Code

export function _waitForElement(selector, delay = 10, tries = 100) {
  const element = document.querySelector(selector);


  if (!window[`__${selector}`]) {
    window[`__${selector}`] = 0;
    window[`__${selector}__delay`] = delay;
    window[`__${selector}__tries`] = tries;
  }

  function _search() {
    return new Promise((resolve) => {
      window[`__${selector}`]++;
      setTimeout(resolve, window[`__${selector}__delay`]);
    });
  }

  if (element === null) {
    if (window[`__${selector}`] >= window[`__${selector}__tries`]) {
      window[`__${selector}`] = 0;
      return Promise.resolve(null);
    }

    return _search().then(() => _waitForElement(selector));
  } else {
    return Promise.resolve(element);
  }
}

Usage:

async function wait(){
    try{
        const $el = await waitForElement(".llama");
        console.log($el);
    } catch(err){
        console.error("Timeout - couldn't find element.")
    }
} 

wait();

In the example above it will wait for the selector .llama. You can add a greater delay and test it here on the console of StackoverFlow.

Just add the class llama to any element on the DOM.

2

Here is a TypeScript version of Yong Wang's accepted answer using MutationObserver which takes an optional return type that extends from HTMLElement.

This is useful if you need to access element type specific properties (like src on an <img> or href on a <a> link):

function waitFor<T extends HTMLElement>(selector: string): Promise<T> {
  return new Promise((resolve) => {
    const elm = document.querySelector<T>(selector)
    if (elm) return resolve(elm)

    const observer = new MutationObserver((mutations) => {
      const elm = document.querySelector<T>(selector)
      if (elm) {
        resolve(elm)
        observer.disconnect()
      }
    })

    observer.observe(document.body, {
      childList: true,
      subtree: true,
    })
  })
}

Usage:

// By default, returns the type "HTMLElement"
const elm = await waitFor('h1')

// Or specify element type if you know it:
const elm = await waitFor<HTMLFormElement>('form')
1

If you want it to stop looking after a while (timeout) then the following jQuery will work. It will time out after 10sec. I needed to use this code rather than pure JS because I needed to select an input via name and was having trouble implementing some of the other solutions.

 // Wait for element to exist.

    function imageLoaded(el, cb,time) {

        if ($(el).length) {
            // Element is now loaded.

            cb($(el));

            var imageInput =  $('input[name=product\\[image_location\\]]');
            console.log(imageInput);

        } else if(time < 10000) {
            // Repeat every 500ms.
            setTimeout(function() {
               time = time+500;

                imageLoaded(el, cb, time)
            }, 500);
        }
    };

    var time = 500;

    imageLoaded('input[name=product\\[image_location\\]]', function(el) {

     //do stuff here 

     },time);
1

I try to avoid mutation observers if I can help it, so this is what I came up with. It looks similar to some of the other answers above. This function will look for the first element to exist within a given DOM call -- className being the expected usage but it can also accept tagName or Id. You could also add an argument for a precise index if you were looking for some number of elements with a given classname or tagname to have loaded.

    async function waitUntilElementExits(domkey,domquery,maxtime){
        const delay = (ms) => new Promise(res => setTimeout(res, ms));
        for(let i=0; i<maxtime; i=i+200){
            await delay(200);
            let elm = document[domkey](domquery);
            if( (domkey == 'getElementById' && elm) || elm?.[0] ) break;
        }
    }
    // usage
    await waitUntilElementExits('getElementByClassName','some_class_name',10000)
2
  • 4
    "I try to avoid mutation observers" Why?
    – mattsven
    Commented May 14, 2022 at 6:06
  • 7
    It's mostly a matter of preference due to the type of work I perform, but in this particular case, I am not sure it makes sense to listen to the entire DOM tree until an element comes into existence. I am typically building web scrapers and addons, and I find that mutation observers are not reliable when I am not confident about the page behavior. This is why I have a maxtime in my solution. I often need my functions to be "try to do this, but give up if its hard." Commented May 15, 2022 at 12:10
1

My take on @Yong Wong's solution, but it has an optional timeout and you can specify the root node from where you'd like to wait for the element.

Full async/await.

const $ = (selector, opts) => {
  let timeout = undefined;
  let root = undefined;

  if (opts) {
    ({ root, timeout } = opts);
  }

  if (root === undefined) root = document.body;
  
  const nodeFound = root.querySelector(selector);
  if (nodeFound) return new Promise(resolve => resolve(nodeFound));

  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    let callback = () => {
      observer.disconnect();
    };

    const _resolve = (node) => {
      callback();
      resolve(node);
    };

    const _reject = (err) => {
      callback();
      reject(err);
    };

    if (timeout && timeout > 0) {
      const handle = setTimeout(() => {
        _reject(new Error("Element not found: timeout exceeded."));
      }, timeout);
      callback = () => {
        observer.disconnect();
        clearTimeout(handle);
      };
    }

    const observer = new MutationObserver(mutations => {
      for (const mutation of mutations) {
        for (const addedNode of mutation.addedNodes) {
          if (addedNode.matches(selector)) {
            _resolve(addedNode);
            return;
          }
        }
      }
    });

    observer.observe(root, {
      childList: true,
      subtree: true,
    });
  });
}

Example call:

// wait for 10 seconds for 'div.bla-bla-bla' to appear as a child of 'div.some-container'
await $("div.bla-bla-bla", {
  timeout: 10000,
  root: document.querySelector("div.some-container") 
});
1

Instead of querySelector you can also use getElementById

This function is exactly same as https://stackoverflow.com/a/61511955/10798137

  async function waitForElementById(id, timeout = null, location = document.body) {
    return new Promise((resolve) => {
        let element = document.getElementById(id);
        if (element) {
            return resolve(element);
        }

        const observer = new MutationObserver(async () => {
            let element = document.getElementById(id);
            if (element) {
                resolve(element);
                observer.disconnect();
            } else {
                if (timeout) {
                    async function timeOver() {
                        return new Promise((resolve) => {
                            setTimeout(() => {
                                observer.disconnect();
                                resolve(false);
                            }, timeout);
                        });
                    }
                    resolve(await timeOver());
                }
            }
        });

        observer.observe(location, {
            childList: true,
            subtree: true,
        });
    });
}

To use it


    waitForElementById("tag_id", 500).then((elm) => {
      console.log(elm)
    })

Or


    var elm = async waitForElementById("tag_id", 500)

1
  • This shouldn't be an answer. Commented Mar 2 at 3:10
1

Use the arrive.js library written by Uzair Farooq which internally uses the mutation observer api.

Examples from the project's readme:

// watch for creation of an element which satisfies the selector ".test-elem"
document.arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
    // newElem refers to the newly created element
});

// the above event would watch for creation of element in whole document
// it's better to be more specific whenever possible, for example
document.querySelector(".container-1").arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
});

// you can bind event to multiple elements at once
// this will bind arrive event to all the elements returned by document.querySelectorAll()
document.querySelectorAll(".box").arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
});

I read through the other answers and found this library as a comment to another answer.

I had already implemented my own solution using the mutation observer API but I think this library is a better, more thorough implementation of the concept than my solution or many of the others that are snippets but not as fully fleshed out as this library is.

1

I've adapted the function by @YongWang to use a lambda so anything can be used, including XPath:

function waitForElement(findElement) {
  return new Promise(resolve => {
      const elem = findElement();
      if (elem) {
          return resolve(elem);
      }

      const observer = new MutationObserver(_ => {
          const elem = findElement();
          if (elem) {
              observer.disconnect();
              resolve(elem);
          }
      });

      observer.observe(document.documentElement, {
          childList: true,
          subtree: true
      });
  });
}

To use it with async/await and xpath, use this code:

function findByXPath(xpath) {
  return document.evaluate(xpath, document, null, XPathResult.FIRST_ORDERED_NODE_TYPE, null).singleNodeValue;
}

(async() => {
  const btn = await waitForElement(() => findByXPath("//*[text()='foobar']"));
  console.log('button with text foobar appeared: ', btn);
})();
0

Simple Javascript.

cont elementExist = setInterval(() => {
    var elm = document.getElementById("elementId")
    if (elm!=null)
         // call your function here to do something
        clearInterval(elementExist);
    }
}, 100);

Note: This will block other executions

0

based on the answer from Yong Wang

const waitForElm = (selector, parentNode = null, timeout = null) => new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    if (!selector) reject("no selector");
    if (!parentNode) parentNode = globalThis.document.body;
    for (const res = parentNode.querySelector(selector);;) {
        if (res) return resolve(res);
        break;
    }
    let timeoutID = null;
    const observer = new MutationObserver(mutations => {
        const res = mutations.addedNodes.find(
            node => node.matchesSelector(selector));
        if (res) {
            if (timeoutID) clearTimeout(timeoutID);
            observer.disconnect();
            resolve(res);
        }
    });
    timeoutID = timeout ? setTimeout(() => {
        observer.disconnect();
        reject("timeout");
    }, timeout) : null;
    // If you get "parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'" error
    // see https://stackoverflow.com/a/77855838/492336
    observer.observe(parentNode, {
        childList: true,
        subtree: true
    });
});

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