This should work. getElementsByClassName
returns an array Array-like object(see edit) of the elements matching the criteria.
var elements = document.getElementsByClassName("classname");
var myFunction = function() {
var attribute = this.getAttribute("data-myattribute");
alert(attribute);
};
for (var i = 0; i < elements.length; i++) {
elements[i].addEventListener('click', myFunction, false);
}
jQuery does the looping part for you, which you need to do in plain JavaScript.
If you have ES6 support you can replace your last line with:
Array.from(elements).forEach(function(element) {
element.addEventListener('click', myFunction);
});
Note: Older browsers (like IE6, IE7, IE8) don´t support getElementsByClassName
and so they return undefined
.
Correction
getElementsByClassName
doesn't return an array, but a HTMLCollection in most, or a NodeList in some browsers (Mozilla ref). Both of these types are Array-Like, (meaning that they have a length property and the objects can be accessed via their index), but are not strictly an Array or inherited from an Array (meaning other methods that can be performed on an Array cannot be performed on these types).
Thanks to user @Nemo for pointing this out and having me dig in to fully understand.
With modern JavaScript it can be done like this:
const divs = document.querySelectorAll('.a');
divs.forEach(el => el.addEventListener('click', event => {
console.log(event.target.getAttribute("data-el"));
}));
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width">
<title>Example</title>
<style>
.a {
background-color:red;
height: 33px;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
margin-bottom: 10px;
cursor: pointer;
}
.b {
background-color:#00AA00;
height: 50px;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
margin-bottom: 10px;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="a" data-el="1">1</div>
<div class="b" data-el="no-click-handler">2</div>
<div class="a" data-el="3">11</div>
</body>
</html>
event.target
to retrieve more information for specific element* This was edited to allow for children of the target class to trigger the events. See bottom of the answer for details. *
An alternative answer to add an event listener to a class where items are frequently being added and removed. This is inspired by jQuery's on
function where you can pass in a selector for a child element that the event is listening on.
var base = document.querySelector('#base'); // the container for the variable content
var selector = '.card'; // any css selector for children
base.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
// find the closest parent of the event target that
// matches the selector
var closest = event.target.closest(selector);
if (closest && base.contains(closest)) {
// handle class event
}
});
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/u6oje7af/94/
This will listen for clicks on children of the base
element and if the target of a click has a parent matching the selector, the class event will be handled. You can add and remove elements as you like without having to add more click listeners to the individual elements. This will catch them all even for elements added after this listener was added, just like the jQuery functionality (which I imagine is somewhat similar under the hood).
This depends on the events propagating, so if you stopPropagation
on the event somewhere else, this may not work. Also, the closest
function has some compatibility issues with IE apparently (what doesn't?).
This could be made into a function if you need to do this type of action listening repeatedly, like
function addChildEventListener(base, eventName, selector, handler) {
base.addEventListener(eventName, function(event) {
var closest = event.target.closest(selector);
if (closest && base.contains(closest)) {
// passes the event to the handler and sets `this`
// in the handler as the closest parent matching the
// selector from the target element of the event
handler.call(closest, event);
}
});
}
=========================================
EDIT: This post originally used the matches
function for DOM elements on the event target, but this restricted the targets of events to the direct class only. It has been updated to use the closest
function instead, allowing for events on children of the desired class to trigger the events as well. The original matches
code can be found at the original fiddle:
https://jsfiddle.net/u6oje7af/23/
You can use the code below:
document.body.addEventListener('click', function (evt) {
if (evt.target.className === 'databox') {
alert(this)
}
}, false);
Yow can use querySelectorAll to select all the classes and loop through them to assign the eventListener. The if condition checks if it contains the class name.
const arrClass = document.querySelectorAll(".className");
for (let i of arrClass) {
i.addEventListener("click", (e) => {
if (e.target.classList.contains("className")) {
console.log("Perfrom Action")
}
})
}
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