Reputation: 6936
I would like to know what exactly is the difference between querySelector
and querySelectorAll
against getElementsByClassName
and getElementById
?
From this link I could gather that with querySelector
I can write document.querySelector(".myclass")
to get elements with class myclass
and document.querySelector("#myid")
to get element with ID myid
. But I can already do that getElementsByClassName
and getElementById
. Which one should be preferred?
Also I work in XPages where the ID is dynamically generated with colon and looks like this view:_id1:inputText1
. So when I write document.querySelector("#view:_id1:inputText1")
it doesn't work. But writing document.getElementById("view:_id1:inputText1")
works. Any ideas why?
Upvotes: 272
Views: 197167
Reputation: 1
According to my web teacher, querySelector is more versatile, can be applyed to more cases than getElements and above all can be more specific than getElements.
for an Example, while using getElementsByClassName("presentation"), you are restricted to just find an element(s) by class or id name, when you uses the querySelector, you can find an specific or all scpecific html tag(s) that contains a class. Let me give you an example:
let h1 = document.getElementsByClassName("example");
<h1 class="example">Hello</h1>
<p class="example">blablabla</p>
in this case, you'll get a list of all elements that contains the specified class. but supposing that you have a larger code, that makes impossible to work with index, and you just want the h1 tags that contains the example class, it wont be very effective, right?
it is here where querySelectors join in the game
with querySelectors, you can be so much specific and get more detailed results like in this case
let heading = document.querySelectorAll("h1.example");
<h1 class="example">Hello</h1>
<p class="example">blablabla</p>
<h1 class="example">World</h1>
<p class="example">blablabla</p>
here, you will get just the h1 tags that contains the example files, instead all of the document tags with that class like using getElements
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4570
For this answer, I refer to querySelector
and querySelectorAll
as querySelector*
and to getElementById
, getElementsByClassName
, getElementsByTagName
, and getElementsByName
as getElement*
.
A lot of this information can be verified in the specification, a lot of it is from various benchmarks I ran when I wrote it. The spec: https://dom.spec.whatwg.org/
querySelector*
is more flexible, as you can pass it any CSS3 selector, not just simple ones for id, tag, or class.querySelector*
changes with the size of the DOM that it is invoked on. To be precise, querySelector*
calls run in O(n) time and getElement*
calls run in O(1) time, where n is the total number of all children of the element or document it is invoked on.querySelector
and getElementById
both return a single element. querySelectorAll
and getElementsByName
both return NodeLists. The older getElementsByClassName
and getElementsByTagName
both return HTMLCollections. NodeLists and HTMLCollections are both referred to as collections of elements.getElements*
calls return live collections, and querySelectorAll
returns a static collection. The way that I understand it, live collections contain references to elements in the DOM, and static collections contain copies of elements. Take a look at @Jan Feldmann's comments below for a different angle as well. I haven't figured out a good way to incorporate it into my answer but it may be a more accurate understanding.These concepts are summarized in the following table.
Function | Live? | Type | Time Complexity
querySelector | | Element | O(n)
querySelectorAll | N | NodeList | O(n)
getElementById | | Element | O(1)
getElementsByClassName | Y | HTMLCollection | O(1)
getElementsByTagName | Y | HTMLCollection | O(1)
getElementsByName | Y | NodeList | O(1)
HTMLCollections are not as array-like as NodeLists and do not support .forEach(). I find the spread operator useful to work around this:
[...document.getElementsByClassName("someClass")].forEach()
Every element, and the global document
, has access to all of these functions except for getElementById
and getElementsByName
, which are only implemented on document
.
Chaining getElement*
calls instead of using querySelector*
will improve performance, especially on very large DOMs. Even on small DOMs and/or with very long chains, it is generally faster. However, unless you know you need the performance, the readability of querySelector*
should be preferred. querySelectorAll
is often harder to rewrite, because you must select elements from the NodeList or HTMLCollection at every step. For example, the following code does not work:
document.getElementsByClassName("someClass").getElementsByTagName("div")
because you can only use getElements*
on single elements, not collections, but if you only wanted one element, then:
document.querySelector("#someId .someClass div")
could be written as:
document.getElementById("someId").getElementsByClassName("someClass")[0].getElementsByTagName("div")[0]
Note the use of [0]
to get just the first element of the collection at each step that returns a collection, resulting in one element at the end just like with querySelector
.
Since all elements have access to both querySelector*
and getElement*
calls, you can make chains using both calls, which can be useful if you want some performance gain, but cannot avoid a querySelector*
call that can not be written in terms of the getElement*
calls.
Though it is generally easy to tell if a selector can be written using only getElement*
calls, there is one case that may not be obvious:
document.querySelectorAll(".class1.class2")
can be rewritten as
document.getElementsByClassName("class1 class2")
Using getElement*
on a static element fetched with querySelector*
will result in an element that is live with respect to the static subset of the DOM copied by querySelector*
, but not live with respect to the full document DOM... this is where the simple live/static interpretation of elements begins to fall apart. You should probably avoid situations where you have to worry about this, but if you do, remember that querySelector*
calls copy elements they find before returning references to them, but getElement*
calls fetch direct references without copying.
querySelector*
and getElementById
traverse elements in preorder, depth-first, called "tree order" in the specification. With other getElement*
calls it is not clear to me from the specification - they may be the same as tree order, but getElementsByClassName("someClass")[0]
may not reliably give the same result in every browser. getElementById("someId")
should though, even if you have multiple copies of the same id on your page.
I was working on an infinite scroll page when I had to look into this, and I think that is likely to be a common case where performance becomes an issue. Our code had onScroll events with querySelectorAll
calls in them. Even if the calls were rate limited, the page would break if you scrolled down far enough, at which point there would be too many calls iterating through too many elements for the browser to keep up. The size of the DOM is relevant in this use case, and so there's a good case for preferring getElement*
calls in code that runs on an infinite scroll page.
Upvotes: 267
Reputation: 8728
querySelector
can be a complete CSS(3)-Selector with IDs and Classes and Pseudo-Classes together like this:
'#id.class:pseudo'
// or
'tag #id .class .class.class'
with getElementsByClassName
you can just define a class
'class'
with getElementById
you can just define an id
'id'
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 359
The main difference between querySelector and getlementbyID(Claassname,Tagname etc) is if there is more than one elements which satifies the condition querySelector will return only one output whereas getElementBy* will return all the elements.
Lets consider an example to make it more clear.
<nav id="primary" class="menu">
<a class="link" href="#">For Business</a>
<a class="link" href="#">Become an Instructor</a>
<a class="link" href="#">Mobile Applications</a>
<a class="link" href="#">Support</a>
<a class="link" href="#">Help</a>
</nav>
Below code will explain the difference
**QUERY SELECTOR**
document.querySelector('.link'); // Output : For Business (element)
document.querySelectorAll('.link'); //Out All the element with class link
**GET ELEMENT**
document.getElementsByClassName('link') // Output : will return all the element with a class "link" but whereas in query selector it will return only one element which encounters first.
Inshort if we want to select single element go for queryslector or if we want multiple element go for getElement
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 99
look at this
https://codepen.io/bagdaulet/pen/bzdKjL
getElementById fastest than querySelector on 25%
jquery is slowest
var q = time_my_script(function() {
for (i = 0; i < 1000000; i++) {
var w = document.querySelector('#ll');
}
});
console.log('querySelector: '+q+'ms');
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1353
querySelector
is of w3c Selector API
getElementBy
is of w3c DOM API
IMO the most notable difference is that the return type of querySelectorAll
is a static node list and for getElementsBy
it's a live node list. Therefore the looping in demo 2 never ends because lis
is live and updates itself during each iteration.
// Demo 1 correct
var ul = document.querySelectorAll('ul')[0],
lis = ul.querySelectorAll("li");
for(var i = 0; i < lis.length ; i++){
ul.appendChild(document.createElement("li"));
}
// Demo 2 wrong
var ul = document.getElementsByTagName('ul')[0],
lis = ul.getElementsByTagName("li");
for(var i = 0; i < lis.length ; i++){
ul.appendChild(document.createElement("li"));
}
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1219
Difference between "querySelector" and "querySelectorAll"
//querySelector returns single element
let listsingle = document.querySelector('li');
console.log(listsingle);
//querySelectorAll returns lit/array of elements
let list = document.querySelectorAll('li');
console.log(list);
//Note : output will be visible in Console
<ul>
<li class="test">ffff</li>
<li class="test">vvvv</li>
<li>dddd</li>
<li class="test">ddff</li>
</ul>
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 54016
collecting from Mozilla Documentation:
The NodeSelector interface This specification adds two new methods to any objects implementing the Document, DocumentFragment, or Element interfaces:
querySelector
Returns the first matching Element node within the node's subtree. If no matching node is found, null is returned.
querySelectorAll
Returns a NodeList containing all matching Element nodes within the node's subtree, or an empty NodeList if no matches are found.
and
Note: The NodeList returned by
querySelectorAll()
is not live, which means that changes in the DOM are not reflected in the collection. This is different from other DOM querying methods that return live node lists.
Upvotes: 124
Reputation: 301
I came to this page purely to find out the better method to use in terms of performance - i.e. which is faster:
querySelector / querySelectorAll or getElementsByClassName
and I found this: https://jsperf.com/getelementsbyclassname-vs-queryselectorall/18
It runs a test on the 2 x examples above, plus it chucks in a test for jQuery's equivalent selector as well. my test results were as follows:
getElementsByClassName = 1,138,018 operations / sec - <<< clear winner
querySelectorAll = 39,033 operations / sec
jquery select = 381,648 operations / sec
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 29625
About the differences, there is an important one in the results between querySelectorAll
and getElementsByClassName
: the return value is different. querySelectorAll
will return a static collection, while getElementsByClassName
returns a live collection. This could lead to confusion if you store the results in a variable for later use:
querySelectorAll
will contain the elements that fulfilled the selector at the moment the method was called.getElementsByClassName
will contain the elements that fulfilled the selector when it is used (that may be different from the moment the method was called).For example, notice how even if you haven't reassigned the variables aux1
and aux2
, they contain different values after updating the classes:
// storing all the elements with class "blue" using the two methods
var aux1 = document.querySelectorAll(".blue");
var aux2 = document.getElementsByClassName("blue");
// write the number of elements in each array (values match)
console.log("Number of elements with querySelectorAll = " + aux1.length);
console.log("Number of elements with getElementsByClassName = " + aux2.length);
// change one element's class to "blue"
document.getElementById("div1").className = "blue";
// write the number of elements in each array (values differ)
console.log("Number of elements with querySelectorAll = " + aux1.length);
console.log("Number of elements with getElementsByClassName = " + aux2.length);
.red { color:red; }
.green { color:green; }
.blue { color:blue; }
<div id="div0" class="blue">Blue</div>
<div id="div1" class="red">Red</div>
<div id="div2" class="green">Green</div>
Upvotes: 104
Reputation: 53930
querySelector
and querySelectorAll
are a relatively new APIs, whereas getElementById
and getElementsByClassName
have been with us for a lot longer. That means that what you use will mostly depend on which browsers you need to support.
As for the :
, it has a special meaning so you have to escape it if you have to use it as a part of a ID/class name.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 943108
I would like to know what exactly is the difference between querySelector and querySelectorAll against getElementsByClassName and getElementById?
The syntax and the browser support.
querySelector
is more useful when you want to use more complex selectors.
e.g. All list items descended from an element that is a member of the foo class: .foo li
document.querySelector("#view:_id1:inputText1") it doesn't work. But writing document.getElementById("view:_id1:inputText1") works. Any ideas why?
The :
character has special meaning inside a selector. You have to escape it. (The selector escape character has special meaning in a JS string too, so you have to escape that too).
document.querySelector("#view\\:_id1\\:inputText1")
Upvotes: 141