When creating a div it is an instance of HTMLDivElement
:
var d = document.createElement('div');
d instanceof HTMLDivElement; // true
d instanceof Element; // true
This also holds true when obtaining an external document and window:
var frame = document.createElement('iframe');
document.body.appendChild(frame);
var doc2 = frame.contentWindow.document;
var d2 = doc2.createElement('div');
d2 instanceof frame.contentWindow.HTMLDivElement; // true
d2 instanceof Element; // false, different realm/dom
I've tried creating a document with the Document
constructor to process an external HTML document:
var doc = new Document();
var d = doc.createElement('div');
d instanceof Element; // true
So, it creates Elements and the elements are in the same realm as the one we're in. However to my surprise it does not type its elements:
d instanceof HTMLDivElement; // false
d.constructor.name; // "Element"
Why is that and why does the current document create typed elements while a new document creates only Element
?
new Document
being a document and not an HTMLDocument?document.constructor.name
certainly isHTMLDocument
HTMLElement
andHTMLDivElement
contain browser specific properties (like interaction, events, and so on), whileElement
is very abstract and only contains DOM properties (insert before, insert after, it could be ok also for XML!). So when you create an element in anew Document()
, it just creates an abstractElement
, until you insert it in a HTML DOM, in this case it gets converted in an HTMLDivElementwindow.document.constructor.name; // => "HTMLDocument"
vs.new Document().constructor.name; // => "Document"
vs.document.implementation.createHTMLDocument().constructor.name; // => "HTMLDocument"