0

How can I do this

<div>
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>

What I expected to be the results

C

B

A

How can I achieve this?

3

2 Answers 2

1
Use flexbox :

.wrapper{
display :flex;
flex-direction: column-reverse;
}
<div class='wrapper'>
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>

0
1

Using CSS

You can order the items in reverse, by specifying flex display.

div {
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: column-reverse;
}
<div>
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>

Alternatively, you could transform the child elements by flipping them across their directional axis. Flip the entire div and then flip each p inside the div. Although this works, it should be avoided in favor of flex. Note: After transforming the elements, selection will become very wonky.

div, p {
  transform: scale(1, -1);
}
<div>
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>


Using JavaScript

You could also do this in JavaScript using a function that iterates though a Node's childNodes and inserts them before the first child.

/**
 * @describe Reverses the child nodes of a node in-place.
 * @param {Node} node - The parent of the child nodes to be reversed
 */
const reverseChildNodes = node => {
  for (let i = 1; i < node.childNodes.length; i++) {
    node.insertBefore(node.childNodes[i], node.firstChild);
  }
}

if (Element.prototype.reverseChildren === undefined) {
  Element.prototype.reverseChildren = function() {
    reverseChildNodes(this);
  };
}

// Global function
reverseChildNodes(document.querySelector('.section:first-child'));

// Prototype method on Node object
[...document.querySelectorAll('.section')].pop().reverseChildren();
.section { border: thin solid grey; margin: 0.25em; padding: 0.25em; }
<div class="section">
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>

<div class="section">
  <p>A</p>
  <p>B</p>
  <p>C</p>
</div>

1
  • @G-Cyrillus Thanks. I slightly modified it to not flip across the x-axis. Sep 15, 2020 at 14:27

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