The Road to HTML 5: getElementsByClassName()

Welcome back to my semi-regular column, "The Road to HTML 5," where I'll try to explain some of the new elements, attributes, and other features in the upcoming HTML 5 specification.

The feature of the day is getElementsByClassName() . Long desired by web developers and implemented in Javascript libraries like Prototype, this function does exactly what it says on the tin: it returns a list of elements in the DOM that define one or more classnames in the class attribute. getElementsByClassName() exists as a method of the document object (for searching the entire DOM), as well as on each HTMLElement object (for searching the children of an element).

The HTML 5 specification defines getElementsByClassName() :

The getElementsByClassName( classNames ) method takes a string that contains an unordered set of unique space-separated tokens representing classes. When called, the method must return a live NodeList object containing all the elements in the document, in tree order, that have all the classes specified in that argument, having obtained the classes by splitting a string on spaces. If there are no tokens specified in the argument, then the method must return an empty NodeList . If the document is in quirks mode, then the comparisons for the classes must be done in an ASCII case-insensitive manner, otherwise, the comparisons must be done in a case-sensitive manner.

A Brief History of getElementsByClassName()

Can We Use It?

Yes We Can! As you can tell from the timeline, getElementsByClassName() is supported natively in Firefox 3, Opera 9.5, Safari 3.1, and all versions of Google Chrome. It is not available in any version of Microsoft Internet Explorer. (IE 8 beta 2 is the latest version as of this writing.) To use it in browsers that do not support it natively, you will need a wrapper script. There are many such scripts; I myself am partial to Robert Nyman's Ultimate GetElementsByClassName. It uses the native getElementsByClassName() method in modern browsers that support it, then falls back to the little-known document.evaluate() method, which is supported by older versions of Firefox (since at least 1.5) and Opera (since at least 9.27). If all else fails, Robert's script falls back to recursively traversing the DOM and collecting elements that match the given classnames.

And in conclusion