I want to create a div after a click and store the created div in localStorage
.
b.addEventListener('click', addDiv);
function addDiv() {
var div = document.createElement('div');
}
I want to create a div after a click and store the created div in localStorage
.
b.addEventListener('click', addDiv);
function addDiv() {
var div = document.createElement('div');
}
From the above comments ...
"@AlvéMonke ... almost correct. The OP needs to write a serializer which describes how an html element gets created e.g. by writing a JSON serializable data format. The JSON stringified value of this format then can be stored into and retrieved from the storage. The restored/parsed data format then can be send to a deserializer (needs to be written too) which upon the data does create an appropriate html element." – Peter Seliger
"@PeterSeliger can you please code your answer?"" – user16846263
A poor man's approach, though reliable, would be the usage of Element.outerHTML
for serializing (storing) together with the more advanced DOMParser.parseFromString
for deserializing (retrieving / parsing).
function putSerializedElementIntoStorage(storage, key, elmNode) {
// serialization.
const value = elmNode?.outerHTML ?? '';
// storage.
storage.setItem(key, value);
}
function getParsedElementFromStorage(storage, key) {
return (new DOMParser())
// deserialization ...
.parseFromString(
// ... from storage.
storage.getItem(key) ?? '',
"text/html",
)
.body
// parsed element.
.firstElementChild;
}
document
.querySelector('#save-element-markup')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) =>
putSerializedElementIntoStorage(
mock.localStorage,
currentTarget.id,
currentTarget,
)
);
document
.querySelector('#watch-stored-markup')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) =>
console.log({
storedMarkup: mock
.localStorage
.getItem(currentTarget.dataset.storageKey),
})
);
document
.querySelector('#append-parsed-element')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) => {
const elmNode = getParsedElementFromStorage(
mock.localStorage,
currentTarget.dataset.storageKey,
);
if (elmNode) {
document
.body
.appendChild(elmNode);
}
});
button { display: block; margin: 3px 10px; }
button:nth-child(1) { margin: 0 15px 12px;}
button:nth-child(2), button:nth-child(3) { margin: 6px 15px; }
hr { position: relative; left: -25%; width: 48%; }
.as-console-wrapper { left: auto!important; width: 50%; min-height: 100%; }
<button id="save-element-markup">
<em>save</em>
my markup
</button>
<button
id="watch-stored-markup"
data-storage-key="save-element-markup"
>
<em>watch</em> stored markup
</button>
<button
id="append-parsed-element"
data-storage-key="save-element-markup"
>
<em>append</em>
element, parsed from saved markup
</button>
<hr/>
<script>
// mock for the SO specific stack snippet
// due to the policies and environment are
// not allowing an original storage access.
const mock = {
localStorage: (function () {
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Storage
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Map
const storage = new Map;
function key(int) {
return [
...storage.keys()
][parseInt(int, 10)];
}
function setItem(key, value) {
return storage.set(String(key), String(value));
}
function getItem(key) {
return storage.get(String(key));
}
function removeItem(key) {
return storage.delete(String(key));
}
function clear() {
return storage.clear();
}
return {
get length() {
return storage.size;
},
key,
getItem,
setItem,
removeItem,
clear,
};
}()),
}
</script>
Edit
One of cause could come up with an own JSON compatible serialization format for DOM elements, where one needs to write a serializing and a deserializing/parse process for the latter.
function serializeElementNode({
nodeName = '',
attributes = [],
childNodes = [],
}) {
return {
type: 'element',
name: nodeName.toLowerCase(),
...(
attributes.length !== 0
&& {
attributes: Object
.values(attributes)
.map(({ nodeName: key, nodeValue: value }) =>
({ /*type: 'attribute', */key, value })
)
} || {}
),
...(
childNodes.length !== 0
&& {
childNodes: [...childNodes]
.map(serializeDomNode)
} || {}
),
};
}
function serializeTextNode({ nodeValue: value = '' }) {
return {
type: 'text',
value,
};
}
function serializeDomNode(node) {
return ({
1: serializeElementNode,
3: serializeTextNode,
})[node?.nodeType]?.(node);
}
function parseElementNode({
name = 'unknown-element',
attributes = [],
childNodes = [],
}) {
const elmNode = attributes
.reduce((node, { key, value }) => {
node.setAttribute(key, value);
return node;
}, document.createElement(name));
return childNodes
.reduce((rootNode, node) => {
rootNode
.appendChild(
parseDomNode(node)
);
return rootNode;
}, elmNode);
}
function parseTextNode({ value = '' }) {
return document.createTextNode(value);
}
function parseDomNode(node) {
return ({
element: parseElementNode,
text: parseTextNode,
})[node?.type]?.(node);
}
function putSerializedElementIntoStorage(storage, key, elmNode) {
// serialization.
const value = JSON.stringify(serializeDomNode(elmNode));
// storage.
storage.setItem(key, value);
}
function getParsedElementFromStorage(storage, key) {
// deserialized/parsed element ...
return parseDomNode(
JSON.parse(
// ... from storage.
storage.getItem(key) ?? null
)
);
}
document
.querySelector('#save-serialized-element')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) =>
putSerializedElementIntoStorage(
mock.localStorage,
currentTarget.id,
currentTarget,
)
);
document
.querySelector('#watch-serialized-element')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) => {
const serializedElementString = mock
.localStorage
.getItem(currentTarget.dataset.storageKey);
console.log({
serializedElementString,
... (
serializedElementString && {
serializedElement: JSON.parse(serializedElementString)
} || {}
),
});
});
document
.querySelector('#append-parsed-element')
.addEventListener('click', ({ currentTarget }) => {
const elmNode = getParsedElementFromStorage(
mock.localStorage,
currentTarget.dataset.storageKey,
);
if (elmNode) {
document
.body
.appendChild(elmNode);
}
});
button { display: block; margin: 3px 10px; }
button:nth-child(1) { margin: 0 15px 12px;}
button:nth-child(2), button:nth-child(3) { margin: 6px 15px; }
hr { position: relative; left: -25%; width: 48%; }
.as-console-wrapper { left: auto!important; width: 50%; min-height: 100%; }
<button id="save-serialized-element">
<em>serialize and save</em>
this element
</button>
<button
id="watch-serialized-element"
data-storage-key="save-serialized-element"
>
<em>watch</em> stored serialized element
</button>
<button
id="append-parsed-element"
data-storage-key="save-serialized-element"
>
<em>append</em>
parsed node from stored serialization
</button>
<hr/>
<script>
// mock for the SO specific stack snippet
// due to the policies and environment are
// not allowing an original storage access.
const mock = {
localStorage: (function () {
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Storage
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Map
const storage = new Map;
function key(int) {
return [
...storage.keys()
][parseInt(int, 10)];
}
function setItem(key, value) {
return storage.set(String(key), String(value));
}
function getItem(key) {
return storage.get(String(key));
}
function removeItem(key) {
return storage.delete(String(key));
}
function clear() {
return storage.clear();
}
return {
get length() {
return storage.size;
},
key,
getItem,
setItem,
removeItem,
clear,
};
}()),
}
</script>
b.addEventListener('click', addDiv);
function addDiv() {
var div = document.createElement('div');
div.innerHTML = "Content to be add and get from localStorage!"
localStorage.setItem("contentDiv",div.outerHTML);
}
To Retrieve can use like:
function getStoaregeDate(){
document.getElementById("elementId").innerHTML =
localStorage.getItem("contentDiv");
}
I have updated my answer. Please check now. Hope this help. Thanks!
localStorage
is an entirely string based storage. The return value of localStorage.getItem("contentDiv")
will always be '[object HTMLDivElement]'
since localStorage.setItem("contentDiv", div)
will do a toString
coercion to the div
node reference prior to storing it.
Jul 8, 2022 at 10:08
HTML DOM element
and then set that string tolocalStorage
, using itssetItem
method. Then, when you want to retrieve it, you can uselocalStorage.getItem("element")
and thenJSON.parse
it.