11

Is there anyway to access an iframe's contents via a selector? Something like this:

$("iframe::contents .my-foo")

I'm constantly accessing an iframe's contents for a project I'm currently working on and $("iframe").contents().find(".my-foo") is becoming a bit tedious to type out.

If this feature doesn't exist in jquery out of the box, is there a plugin that provides this functionality? If not how could I write such a plugin?

4 Answers 4

18

I had this issue once where I found it tedious. I never found a solution for how to write a single selector like that.

Even so, the selector is still rather long. The most obvious solution to me is just save it to a variable.

var frame = $("iframe").contents();

frame.find(".my-foo")
...

Is that better?

1
  • Some More Info - contents() = children() + plaintext . Some may be thinking what is the use of contents() when we could just use $('iframe').find('.my-foo'), then please read The contents() method can also access the HTML of an iframe, if it is in the same domain. from w3schools.com/jquery/traversing_contents.asp
    – Ankit
    Dec 26, 2015 at 19:16
2

Intuitively, it seems more elegant to pack everything into the one selector, but the truth is that, even if there were such a selector, it is better from a performance perspective to traverse with find(). Then jQuery doesn't have to parse and analyze the string.

1

Added here for posterity. The solution I ended up going with was to override the root jquery object with a bit of custom parsing code. Something like this:

(function() {
    var rootjq = window.jQuery;

    var myjq = function(selector, context) {
        if(selector.indexOf("::contents") === -1) {
            return rootjq(selector, context);
        } else {
            var split = selector.split("::contents");

            var ifrm = split[0];
            var subsel = split.splice(1).join("::contents");

            var contents = rootjq(ifrm, context).contents();

            // Recursive call to support multiple ::contents in a query
            return myjq(subsel, contents);
        }
    };
    myjq.prototype = myjq.fn = rootjq.fn;

    window.jQuery = window.$ = myjq;
})();

Note that double colon (::) in css means select pseudo element, while single colon means select by pseudo class.

0

You can create your own custom selector. Like:

$.extend($.expr[':'], {
    contents: function(elem, i, attr){
      return $(elem).contents().find( attr[3] );
    }
});  

Usage should be like

$('iframe:contents(.my-foo)').remove(); 
2
  • Out of curiosity why are using $.extend? Why not add the property directly like this: $.expr[":"].contents = function(...) { ... }?
    – Xavi
    May 13, 2011 at 14:00
  • This answer doesn't work. I was looking for a replacement of $("iframe").contents().find(".my-foo"). Functions hanging off of $.expr[':'] act like filters.
    – Xavi
    May 13, 2011 at 16:09

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.