Book Image

Learning jQuery : Better Interaction Design and Web Development with Simple JavaScript Techniques

Book Image

Learning jQuery : Better Interaction Design and Web Development with Simple JavaScript Techniques

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning jQuery
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface

Accessing DOM Elements


Every selector expression and most jQuery methods return a jQuery object, which is almost always what we want, because of the implicit iteration and chaining capabilities that it affords.

Still, there may be points in our code when we need to access a DOM element directly. For example, we may need to make a resulting set of elements available to another JavaScript library. Or we might need to access an element’s tag name. For these admittedly rare situations, jQuery provides the .get() method. To access the first DOM element referred to by a jQuery object, we would use .get(0). If the DOM element is needed within a loop, we would use .get(index). So, if we want to know the tag name of an element with id="my-element", we would write:

var myTag = $('#my-element').get(0).tagName;

For even greater convenience, jQuery provides a shorthand for .get(). Instead of writing $('#my-element').get(0), for example, we can use square brackets immediately following the selector: ...