Document: querySelector() method
The Document
method querySelector()
returns the first Element
within the document that matches the specified
CSS selector, or group of CSS selectors. If no matches are found, null
is returned.
The matching is done using depth-first pre-order traversal of the document's nodes starting with the first element in the document's markup and iterating through sequential nodes by order of the number of child nodes.
If the specified selector matches an ID that is incorrectly used more than once in the document, the first element with that ID is returned.
CSS pseudo-elements will never return any elements, as specified in the Selectors API.
Syntax
querySelector(selectors)
Parameters
selectors
-
A string containing one or more selectors to match. This string must be a valid CSS selector string; if it isn't, a
SyntaxError
exception is thrown.Note that the HTML specification does not require attribute values to be valid CSS identifiers. If a
class
orid
attribute value is not a valid CSS identifier, then you must escape it before using it in a selector, either by callingCSS.escape()
on the value, or using one of the techniques described in Escaping characters. See Escaping attribute values for an example.
Return value
An Element
object representing the first element in the document
that matches the specified set of CSS selectors, or null
is returned if there are no matches.
If you need a list of all elements matching the specified selectors, you should use
querySelectorAll()
instead.
Exceptions
SyntaxError
DOMException
-
Thrown if the syntax of the specified selectors is invalid.
Examples
Finding the first element matching a class
In this example, the first element in the document with the class
"myclass
" is returned:
const el = document.querySelector(".myclass");
Complex selectors
Selectors can also be really powerful, as demonstrated in the following example. Here,
the first <input>
element with the name "login"
(<input name="login"/>
) located inside a <div>
whose
class is "user-panel main" (<div class="user-panel main">
) in the
document is returned:
const el = document.querySelector("div.user-panel.main input[name='login']");
Negation
As all CSS selector strings are valid, you can also negate selectors:
const el = document.querySelector(
"div.user-panel:not(.main) input[name='login']",
);
This will select an input with a parent div with the user-panel
class but
not the main
class.
Escaping attribute values
This example shows that if an HTML document contains an id
which is not a valid CSS identifier, then we must escape the attribute value before using it in querySelector()
.
HTML
In the following code, a <div>
element has an id
of "this?element"
, which is not a valid CSS identifier, because the "?"
character is not allowed in CSS identifiers.
We also have three buttons, and a <pre>
element for logging errors.
<div id="this?element"></div>
<button id="no-escape">No escape</button>
<button id="css-escape">CSS.escape()</button>
<button id="manual-escape">Manual escape</button>
<pre id="log"></pre>
CSS
div {
background-color: blue;
margin: 1rem 0;
height: 100px;
width: 200px;
}
JavaScript
All three buttons, when clicked, try to select the <div>
, and then set its background color to a random value.
- The first button uses the
"this?element"
value directly. - The second button escapes the value using
CSS.escape()
. - The third button explicitly escapes the
"?"
character using a backslash. Note that we must also escape the backslash itself, using another backslash, like:"\\?"
.
const log = document.querySelector("#log");
function random(number) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * number);
}
function setBackgroundColor(id) {
log.textContent = "";
try {
const element = document.querySelector(`#${id}`);
const randomColor = `rgb(${random(255)} ${random(255)} ${random(255)})`;
element.style.backgroundColor = randomColor;
} catch (e) {
log.textContent = e;
}
}
document.querySelector("#no-escape").addEventListener("click", () => {
setBackgroundColor("this?element");
});
document.querySelector("#css-escape").addEventListener("click", () => {
setBackgroundColor(CSS.escape("this?element"));
});
document.querySelector("#manual-escape").addEventListener("click", () => {
setBackgroundColor("this\\?element");
});
Result
Clicking the first button gives an error, while the second and third buttons work properly.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
DOM Standard # ref-for-dom-parentnode-queryselector① |
Browser compatibility
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