17

I faced a problem as to remove image with JS code like a...

<img src="image.png" id='image_X'>
...
document.getElementById('image_X').src=''

Image stays unchanged :( So my question is how to remove image with JS? To be more detailed... How to modify the image src attribute value dynamically?

Any useful comment is appreciated

5
  • 2
    Why not just remove the img tag completely? Jul 23, 2011 at 19:17
  • I don't want to delete the tag itself, I need it
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:27
  • And, as a most better thing, I'd like to have something like document.getEelementById('image_X').src=null but I am not sure how to do that :)
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:29
  • I'm beginning to wonder whether your question above is descriptive enough to actually allow someone to provide an answer for what you are trying do in the bigger picture. Please try to provide more information about the approach you are using that includes the image tag's src element being empty/null. Jul 23, 2011 at 20:09
  • 1
    document.getElementById('image_X').src='' work. ahah, getEelementById, did you mean => getElementById without the getE(e)lementById
    – Tim
    Jul 23, 2011 at 20:23

9 Answers 9

18
var image_x = document.getElementById('image_X');
image_x.parentNode.removeChild(image_x);

http://jsfiddle.net/5DdyL/

10
  • Hmm... Shall it remove "img" tag itself? I mean can the "image_X" object be reused then?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:32
  • Yes, that would remove the element from the DOM. If you want to reuse the element (redisplay or move it somewhere else), you could hide it like in Xion's answer, or copy the url to a variable for later access, I suppose. Jul 23, 2011 at 19:34
  • The thing is I don't want to remove the element from the DOM. I want to keep it there but at the same time to have its "src" attribute equal to "null" by clicking a button or something. Is it possible?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:43
  • Why? What would be the point of an element you can't see with no src attribute? Jul 23, 2011 at 19:48
  • No exactly so... I want to have src attribute on its place and at the same time I just want to have the src attribute to be "empty" or "not empty" by clicking a button. That's why I asked the question... Is it possible?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 20:01
9

You could just hide it. In vanilla JS that would be:

document.getElementById("image_X").style.display='none';

In jQuery:

$("#image_X").css('display', 'none');

If you really want to remove it from DOM, there is removeChild method you could invoke on the parentNode of your image element.

6
  • I guess in a way that counts as "removing from view". Jul 23, 2011 at 19:19
  • 2
    this is more idiomatic jQuery: $("#image_X").hide();
    – yitwail
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:22
  • As I may guess, the code is hiding image but I'd like to have its src=null or something :( Is it possible to control img attributes values in such a way?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:36
  • $("#image_X").attr("src", "");, but I'm not entirely sure there isn't a browser that will just show "invalid" placeholder (i.e. an 'x') if the src argument is empty. Better to hide/remove the whole image element.
    – Xion
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:38
  • It's great but I want to change img src from null to image.png for example :) For some reason code like a document.getEelementById('image_X').src=null doesn't work :( The image is not getting "empty" :( But I need to have it empty. How can I do that?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:49
6

This should do it:

var el = document.getElementById('image_X');
el.parentNode.removeChild(el);

You can try it here.

You can neatly wrap that into a function like so:

function removeElement(ele) {
    ele.parentNode.removeChild(ele);
}

removeElement(document.getElementById("image_X"));
1
  • Hmm... I am not sure would the code do thing I want because I am interested to control the img content I mean just to remove its src content but not to remove the whole tag... So how to get the result?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:35
3

Gets its parent and use removeChild.

var parent = getElementById('parentid');
var child = document.getElementById('imagex');
parent.removeChild(child);
2
  • Emm... What the parent means in my case? I want to control the src attribute of tag <img src="image.png" id='image_X'>. How can I do that?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:42
  • @user592704 Its whatever element the image is in... (ex. div, p, table, tr, td etc.) Just give that element an id, and replace parentid with that id!
    – Jonah Katz
    Jul 23, 2011 at 20:44
2

To delete an image in JavaScript (or generally to delete anything), first you should grab the element, then traverse to its parent element, then you can delete the child using removeChild method.

1
  • I don't want to remove tag itself but to have its src empty or something. So I need to get tags attributes and their values control but how?
    – user592704
    Jul 23, 2011 at 19:30
1

Try using:

document.getElementByID("").style.visibilty="hidden";

when you do not want to show the image and

document.getElementById("").style.visibility="visible";

when you want to show the image.

0

I want to share some additional tips...

@Marecky, Thank to Jared Farrish answer I could figure out some helpful points concerning JS...

But next I had to make my own additional research as well... It is not a super fact, but a little theory tip... So, as a result, I could find that browsers, as a any desktop app, of course, are created with some kind of GUI framework... As a rule, most GUI (for example Swing) frameworks, of course, may using double buffered objects to display graphics... So when it (FF for example) re-translates script to graphic objects the GUI sync rules come to life...

...OK... Coming from GUI re-painting problems to scripting itself...

So my question was about playing around DOM objects... The fact was the img tag doesn't update UI event if the code like document.getEelementById('image_X').src='' is activated; So the <body> tag space (for some reason) , I am not sure but, is keeping some kind of 'cached' state... And maybe that makes img (if it is in body) become 'static'; So I had to find some helpful additional object which supports dynamic UI update. As a test, I used div instead of the pure body tag to keep img in it; So not to update body but div inner content only and that helped. So using JS + HTML in my case was helpful...

I hope the tip saves ones day

0

Try

 document.getEelementById('image_X').src="''"; 

but it will display a broken image

0

1) remove img element using parent node. 2) Then, Store that parent node. 3) Then, create new img element in that parent node.

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.