96

Since element.classList is not supported in IE 9 and Safari-5, what's an alternative cross-browser solution?

No-frameworks please.

Solution must work in at least IE 9, Safari 5, FireFox 4, Opera 11.5, and Chrome.

Related posts (but does not contain solution):

  1. how to add and remove css class

  2. Add and remove a class with animation

  3. Add remove class?

9
  • 8
    I will never understand the need for cross-browser compatible code and the refusal to use a framework. That's their very purpose. It's like trying to eat spaghetti but refusing to use a fork, sure you can get by but it's messy.
    – davin
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:33
  • 2
    @davin there's a difference between frameworks and shims. Shims are also valid.
    – Raynos
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:37
  • 2
    @Raynos, most of the time what you think is going to be just one shim ends up being five, which leads to much less maintainable, less tested code that would be better replaced by a framework.
    – davin
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:42
  • 5
    @davin You just need one shim. It's called the DOM shim. Then you just write standards compliant code. You do need a framework, it's called the DOM.
    – Raynos
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:47
  • 30
    @davin because eating spaghetti with a fork doesn't mean that you are not allowed to understand how a fork works.
    – Pacerier
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:53

13 Answers 13

73

Look at these oneliners:

  1. Remove class:

    element.classList.remove('hidden');
    
  2. Add class (will not add it twice if already present):

    element.classList.add('hidden');
    
  3. Toggle class (adds the class if it's not already present and removes it if it is)

    element.classList.toggle('hidden');
    

That's all! I made a test - 10000 iterations. 0.8s.

3
  • 1
    Note that classList is not supported in IE 9 which is stated in OP's question Jun 8, 2016 at 14:06
  • 12
    while it doesn't satisfy a restraint that was extremely particular to OP, I think this question gets looked at by many people hoping for an answer to the general question without those specific restraints. I was very happy to find this, and only noticed it on my second visit. I'm glad I did--much cleaner solution. Thanks!
    – Kyle Baker
    Apr 13, 2018 at 9:45
  • 2
    Mando likes, "That's the way"
    – ieselisra
    Jan 23, 2023 at 16:07
67

Here is solution for addClass, removeClass, hasClass in pure javascript solution.

Actually it's from http://jaketrent.com/post/addremove-classes-raw-javascript/

function hasClass(ele,cls) {
  return !!ele.className.match(new RegExp('(\\s|^)'+cls+'(\\s|$)'));
}

function addClass(ele,cls) {
  if (!hasClass(ele,cls)) ele.className += " "+cls;
}

function removeClass(ele,cls) {
  if (hasClass(ele,cls)) {
    var reg = new RegExp('(\\s|^)'+cls+'(\\s|$)');
    ele.className=ele.className.replace(reg,' ');
  }
}
0
33

I just wrote these up:

function addClass(el, classNameToAdd){
    el.className += ' ' + classNameToAdd;   
}

function removeClass(el, classNameToRemove){
    var elClass = ' ' + el.className + ' ';
    while(elClass.indexOf(' ' + classNameToRemove + ' ') !== -1){
         elClass = elClass.replace(' ' + classNameToRemove + ' ', '');
    }
    el.className = elClass;
}

I think they'll work in all browsers.

6
  • This doesn't work, for example if you try to remove the only class on an element (which doesn't have a space either side of its name)
    – Gareth
    Jul 22, 2011 at 8:50
  • @Gareth, that will work. It inserts a space on each side in line one of removeClass.
    – Paul
    Jul 22, 2011 at 9:00
  • 6
    That will not work. If element has class 'a b c' and you try to remove b, it will set new class to ' ac '. So you have to change '' by ' ' in the replace function. Moreover, class is a reserved keyword.
    – Bali Balo
    Nov 28, 2013 at 21:30
  • 1
    I've fixed your solution to 1. Not use "class", which is a reserved word 2. Your broken removeClass method, which creates tons of clutter after repeated use due to whitespace not being trimmed See solution below as an answer.
    – Drew
    Apr 15, 2014 at 4:56
  • I used this code with the addition of this code just after the replace statement: while (elClass[0] === " ") elClass = elClass.substr(1); while (elClass[elClass.length - 1] === " ") elClass = elClass.substr(0, elClass.length - 1); This will delete the leading and trailing space which might still be present Jul 1, 2015 at 8:21
22

The simplest is element.classList which has remove(name), add(name), toggle(name), and contains(name) methods and is now supported by all major browsers.

For older browsers you change element.className. Here are two helper:

function addClass(element, className){
    element.className += ' ' + className;   
}

function removeClass(element, className) {
    element.className = element.className.replace(
        new RegExp('( |^)' + className + '( |$)', 'g'), ' ').trim();
}
1
  • this does not work for a svg element created with "createElementNS". How can this be achived?
    – neoexpert
    Jan 15, 2020 at 12:50
17

One way to play around with classes without frameworks/libraries would be using the property Element.className, which "gets and sets the value of the class attribute of the specified element." (from the MDN documentation).
As @matías-fidemraizer already mentioned in his answer, once you get the string of classes for your element you can use any methods associated with strings to modify it.

Here's an example:
Assuming you have a div with the ID "myDiv" and that you want to add to it the class "main__section" when the user clicks on it,

window.onload = init;

function init() {
  document.getElementById("myDiv").onclick = addMyClass;
}

function addMyClass() {
  var classString = this.className; // returns the string of all the classes for myDiv
  var newClass = classString.concat(" main__section"); // Adds the class "main__section" to the string (notice the leading space)
  this.className = newClass; // sets className to the new string
}
3
  • 15
    How can this be the accepted answer then the question includes "remove" class but this answer not?
    – Motin
    Apr 17, 2015 at 7:48
  • 7
    .replace(/\bexmaple\b/, "")
    – leafiy
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:05
  • this does not work for a svg element created with "createElementNS". How can this be achived?
    – neoexpert
    Jan 15, 2020 at 12:48
12

Read this Mozilla Developer Network article:

Since element.className property is of type string, you can use regular String object functions found in any JavaScript implementation:

  • If you want to add a class, first use String.indexOf in order to check if class is present in className. If it's not present, just concatenate a blank character and the new class name to this property. If it's present, do nothing.

  • If you want to remove a class, just use String.replace, replacing "[className]" with an empty string. Finally use String.trim to remove blank characters at the start and end of element.className.

5

Fixed the solution from @Paulpro

  1. Do not use "class", as it is a reserved word
  2. removeClass function was broken, as it bugged out after repeated use.

`

function addClass(el, newClassName){
    el.className += ' ' + newClassName;   
}

function removeClass(el, removeClassName){
    var elClass = el.className;
    while(elClass.indexOf(removeClassName) != -1) {
        elClass = elClass.replace(removeClassName, '');
        elClass = elClass.trim();
    }
    el.className = elClass;
}
2
  • SHouldn't you be checking if the class name exists before adding it?
    – JoeTidee
    Apr 29, 2017 at 0:39
  • if(el.className.indexOf(' ' + className) != -1) return; to addClass would help
    – keaton
    Mar 30, 2018 at 15:54
4

The solution is to

Shim .classList:

Either use the DOM-shim or use Eli Grey's shim below

Disclaimer: I believe the support is FF3.6+, Opera10+, FF5, Chrome, IE8+

/*
 * classList.js: Cross-browser full element.classList implementation.
 * 2011-06-15
 *
 * By Eli Grey, http://eligrey.com
 * Public Domain.
 * NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
 */

/*global self, document, DOMException */

/*! @source http://purl.eligrey.com/github/classList.js/blob/master/classList.js*/

if (typeof document !== "undefined" && !("classList" in document.createElement("a"))) {

(function (view) {

"use strict";

var
      classListProp = "classList"
    , protoProp = "prototype"
    , elemCtrProto = (view.HTMLElement || view.Element)[protoProp]
    , objCtr = Object
    , strTrim = String[protoProp].trim || function () {
        return this.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, "");
    }
    , arrIndexOf = Array[protoProp].indexOf || function (item) {
        var
              i = 0
            , len = this.length
        ;
        for (; i < len; i++) {
            if (i in this && this[i] === item) {
                return i;
            }
        }
        return -1;
    }
    // Vendors: please allow content code to instantiate DOMExceptions
    , DOMEx = function (type, message) {
        this.name = type;
        this.code = DOMException[type];
        this.message = message;
    }
    , checkTokenAndGetIndex = function (classList, token) {
        if (token === "") {
            throw new DOMEx(
                  "SYNTAX_ERR"
                , "An invalid or illegal string was specified"
            );
        }
        if (/\s/.test(token)) {
            throw new DOMEx(
                  "INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR"
                , "String contains an invalid character"
            );
        }
        return arrIndexOf.call(classList, token);
    }
    , ClassList = function (elem) {
        var
              trimmedClasses = strTrim.call(elem.className)
            , classes = trimmedClasses ? trimmedClasses.split(/\s+/) : []
            , i = 0
            , len = classes.length
        ;
        for (; i < len; i++) {
            this.push(classes[i]);
        }
        this._updateClassName = function () {
            elem.className = this.toString();
        };
    }
    , classListProto = ClassList[protoProp] = []
    , classListGetter = function () {
        return new ClassList(this);
    }
;
// Most DOMException implementations don't allow calling DOMException's toString()
// on non-DOMExceptions. Error's toString() is sufficient here.
DOMEx[protoProp] = Error[protoProp];
classListProto.item = function (i) {
    return this[i] || null;
};
classListProto.contains = function (token) {
    token += "";
    return checkTokenAndGetIndex(this, token) !== -1;
};
classListProto.add = function (token) {
    token += "";
    if (checkTokenAndGetIndex(this, token) === -1) {
        this.push(token);
        this._updateClassName();
    }
};
classListProto.remove = function (token) {
    token += "";
    var index = checkTokenAndGetIndex(this, token);
    if (index !== -1) {
        this.splice(index, 1);
        this._updateClassName();
    }
};
classListProto.toggle = function (token) {
    token += "";
    if (checkTokenAndGetIndex(this, token) === -1) {
        this.add(token);
    } else {
        this.remove(token);
    }
};
classListProto.toString = function () {
    return this.join(" ");
};

if (objCtr.defineProperty) {
    var classListPropDesc = {
          get: classListGetter
        , enumerable: true
        , configurable: true
    };
    try {
        objCtr.defineProperty(elemCtrProto, classListProp, classListPropDesc);
    } catch (ex) { // IE 8 doesn't support enumerable:true
        if (ex.number === -0x7FF5EC54) {
            classListPropDesc.enumerable = false;
            objCtr.defineProperty(elemCtrProto, classListProp, classListPropDesc);
        }
    }
} else if (objCtr[protoProp].__defineGetter__) {
    elemCtrProto.__defineGetter__(classListProp, classListGetter);
}

}(self));

}
6
  • 1
    Definitely a clever shim. It works in FF at least down to 1.5 (can't test below that). It breaks in IE7 and below. For that reason it is next-to-useless on real sites for anything essential. For real use, go with a framework. Oct 27, 2011 at 18:33
  • @theazureshadow psh, Legacy support is for enterprise solutions, who cares about IE7 outside of the enterprise world.
    – Raynos
    Oct 27, 2011 at 18:35
  • If you care about the 12 percent of users (about one in 8) who currently use IE7 and below (source: marketshare.hitslink.com). I think iOS 5 is the first iOS version to support it, too, so at the time of your posting no iPhone users would be supported. Talk about legacy! Oct 27, 2011 at 19:04
  • 1
    @theazureshadow meh, IE7 doesn't need javascript. And mobiles is a whole different ball game. (The shim should work on mobiles)
    – Raynos
    Oct 27, 2011 at 19:14
  • You're right about mobile. It will really be up to individual cases whether IE7 support is worth it. Most people will find it easily worth it to use a framework to smooth out browser differences -- far beyond classList availability. "IE7 doesn't need javascript" is an extremely questionable statement. Oct 27, 2011 at 20:11
3

Improved version of emil's code (with trim())

function hasClass(ele,cls) {
  return !!ele.className.match(new RegExp('(\\s|^)'+cls+'(\\s|$)'));
}

function addClass(ele,cls) {
  if (!hasClass(ele,cls)) ele.className = ele.className.trim() + " " + cls;
}

function removeClass(ele,cls) {
  if (hasClass(ele,cls)) {
    var reg = new RegExp('(\\s|^)'+cls+'(\\s|$)');
    ele.className = ele.className.replace(reg,' ');
    ele.className = ele.className.trim();
  }
}
2
function addClass(element, classString) {
    element.className = element
        .className
        .split(' ')
        .filter(function (name) { return name !== classString; })
        .concat(classString)
        .join(' ');
}

function removeClass(element, classString) {
    element.className = element
        .className
        .split(' ')
        .filter(function (name) { return name !== classString; })
        .join(' ');
}
2

Just in case if anyone would like to have prototype functions built for elements, this is what I use when I need to manipulate classes of different objects:

Element.prototype.addClass = function (classToAdd) {
  var classes = this.className.split(' ')
  if (classes.indexOf(classToAdd) === -1) classes.push(classToAdd)
  this.className = classes.join(' ')
}

Element.prototype.removeClass = function (classToRemove) {
  var classes = this.className.split(' ')
  var idx =classes.indexOf(classToRemove)
  if (idx !== -1) classes.splice(idx,1)
  this.className = classes.join(' ')
}

Use them like: document.body.addClass('whatever') or document.body.removeClass('whatever')

Instead of body you can also use any other element (div, span, you name it)

0

add css classes: cssClassesStr += cssClassName;

remove css classes: cssClassStr = cssClassStr.replace(cssClassName,"");

add attribute 'Classes': object.setAttribute("class", ""); //pure addition of this attribute

remove attribute: object.removeAttribute("class");

0

A easy to understand way:

// Add class 
DOMElement.className += " one";
// Example:
// var el = document.body;
// el.className += " two"

// Remove class 
function removeDOMClass(element, className) {
    var oldClasses      = element.className,
        oldClassesArray = oldClasses.split(" "),
        newClassesArray = [],
        newClasses;

    // Sort
    var currentClassChecked,
        i;     
    for ( i = 0; i < oldClassesArray.length; i++ ) { 
        // Specified class will not be added in the new array
        currentClassChecked = oldClassesArray[i];
        if( currentClassChecked !== className ) { 
            newClassesArray.push(currentClassChecked);
        }
    }

    // Order 
    newClasses = newClassesArray.join(" ");

    // Apply     
    element.className = newClasses;

    return element;

}
// Example:
// var el = document.body;
// removeDOMClass(el, "two")

https://gist.github.com/sorcamarian/ff8db48c4dbf4f5000982072611955a2

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