278

How do I check if there isn't a class. For example, I know how to check to see if it has the class "test", but how do I check to see if it doesn't have the class "test"?

if($(this).hasClass("test")){
}

9 Answers 9

552
if (!$(this).hasClass("test")) {
2
  • 38
    In the TIMTOWTDI vein, here's a horrible solution: if($(this).is(":not(.test)")) >:)
    – Phrogz
    Oct 20, 2011 at 19:20
  • 32
    In case anyone's wondering: There Is More Than One Way To Do It, But Sometimes Consistency Is Not A Bad Thing Either. Feb 22, 2016 at 1:57
175

sdleihssirhc's answer is of course the correct one for the case in the question, but just as a reference if you need to select elements that don't have a certain class, you can use the not selector:

// select all divs that don't have class test
$( 'div' ).not( ".test" );
$( 'div:not(.test)' );  // <-- alternative 
2
  • 8
    IMHO your answer is best. If sdleihssirhc's answer is correct than this question had nothing to do with jQuery and would be better formulated as 'given some condition, how do I test that that condition is NOT true in Javascript'. What we want with jQuery is operate on whole collections of DOM elements just as easy as we can on single objects. Your answer provides just that solution. +1 Sep 28, 2012 at 9:27
  • 1
    @byronyasgur In the context of the original question the poster wanted to test if a certain known element did not have the class. This code selects all elements that don't have the class, so it wouldn't solve the poster's problem. I don't remember why I posted this in the first place.
    – JJJ
    Mar 11, 2013 at 20:53
20

Select element (or group of elements) having class "abc", not having class "xyz":

    $('.abc:not(".xyz")')

When selecting regular CSS you can use .abc:not(.xyz).

15

You can try this:

<div id="div1" class="myClass">there is a class</div>
<div id="div2"> there is no class2 </div>

$(document).ready(function(){
    $("#div2").not('.myClass');  // do not have `myClass` class.
});
1
  • 1
    This answer doesn't add any value to the page, it was posted 7 years ealier. Please do never post code-only and duplicate content. Jun 28, 2019 at 6:38
8

use the .not() method and check for an attribute:

$('p').not('[class]');

Check it here: http://jsfiddle.net/AWb79/

4
  • 8
    This is completely wrong. Brackets are not for classes but used for selectors identifying attributes. Jul 31, 2015 at 5:06
  • 1
    Actually it's completely right. The '[class]' is correctly identifying the attribute of (not) having a class.
    – Deborah
    Jan 19, 2017 at 13:18
  • @Misterparker classes are attributes. Jun 6, 2017 at 20:37
  • this checks if the attribute is present, not the case if an element has a specific class, as in class value
    – Mark
    Nov 15, 2018 at 14:53
5

Try this.

if (!$(object).hasClass("className")) {


}
0

There are more complex scenarios where this doesn't work. What if you want to select an element with class A that doesn't contain elements with class B. You end up needing something more like:

If parent element does not contain certain child element; jQuery

0

reading through this 6yrs later and thought I'd also take a hack at it, also in the TIMTOWTDI vein...:D, hoping it isn't incorrect 'JS etiquette'.

I usually set up a var with the condition and then refer to it later on..i.e;

// var set up globally OR locally depending on your requirements
var hC;

function(el) {
  var $this = el;
  hC = $this.hasClass("test");

  // use the variable in the conditional statement
  if (!hC) {
    //
  }
}

Although I should mention that I do this because I mainly use the conditional ternary operator and want clean code. So in this case, all i'd have is this:

hC ? '' : foo(x, n) ;
   // OR -----------
!hC ? foo(x, n) : '' ;

...instead of this:

$this.hasClass("test") ? '' : foo(x, n) ;
   // OR -----------
(!$this.hasClass("test")) ? foo(x, n) : '' ;
-1

I don't know why, but the accepted answer didn't work for me. Instead this worked:

if ($(this).hasClass("test") !== false) {}
1
  • 1
    This actually checks if it DOES have class "test". In order to check if it DOES NOT have class "test", you would need to have "=== false", or "!==true" instead of "!== false".
    – Lisa
    Mar 18, 2020 at 3:57

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