Document: createElement() method
In an HTML document, the document.createElement()
method creates the HTML element specified by tagName, or an HTMLUnknownElement
if tagName isn't recognized.
Syntax
createElement(tagName)
createElement(tagName, options)
Parameters
tagName
-
A string that specifies the type of element to be created. The
nodeName
of the created element is initialized with the value of tagName. Don't use qualified names (like "html:a") with this method. When called on an HTML document,createElement()
converts tagName to lower case before creating the element. In Firefox, Opera, and Chrome,createElement(null)
works likecreateElement("null")
. options
Optional-
An object with the following properties:
is
-
The tag name of a custom element previously defined via
customElements.define()
. See Web component example for more details.
Return value
The new Element
.
Note: A new HTMLElement is returned if the document is an HTMLDocument, which is the most common case. Otherwise a new Element is returned.
Examples
Basic example
This creates a new <div>
and inserts it before the element with the ID "div1
".
HTML
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en-US">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<title>Working with elements</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="div1">The text above has been created dynamically.</div>
</body>
</html>
JavaScript
document.body.onload = addElement;
function addElement() {
// create a new div element
const newDiv = document.createElement("div");
// and give it some content
const newContent = document.createTextNode("Hi there and greetings!");
// add the text node to the newly created div
newDiv.appendChild(newContent);
// add the newly created element and its content into the DOM
const currentDiv = document.getElementById("div1");
document.body.insertBefore(newDiv, currentDiv);
}
Result
Web component example
Note: Check the browser compatibility section for support, and the is
attribute reference for caveats on implementation reality of custom built-in elements.
The following example snippet is taken from our expanding-list-web-component example (see it live also). In this case, our custom element extends the HTMLUListElement
, which represents the <ul>
element.
// Create a class for the element
class ExpandingList extends HTMLUListElement {
constructor() {
// Always call super first in constructor
super();
// constructor definition left out for brevity
// …
}
}
// Define the new element
customElements.define("expanding-list", ExpandingList, { extends: "ul" });
If we wanted to create an instance of this element programmatically, we'd use a call along the following lines:
let expandingList = document.createElement("ul", { is: "expanding-list" });
The new element will be given an is
attribute whose value is the custom element's tag name.
Note: For backwards compatibility with previous versions of the Custom Elements specification, some browsers will allow you to pass a string here instead of an object, where the string's value is the custom element's tag name.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
DOM Standard # ref-for-dom-document-createelement① |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
Node.removeChild()
Node.replaceChild()
Node.appendChild()
Node.insertBefore()
Node.hasChildNodes()
document.createElementNS()
— to explicitly specify the namespace URI for the element.