I am trying to make following piece of code to work for each child node once. THe function is also deleting the node as per logic, for more than one child node it never seems to traverse to each child node.
//Deleting from child node
var target =document.getElementById(element.name).childNodes[0];
if(target.hasChildNodes())
{
var children = new Array();
children = target.childNodes;
for(child in children)
{
if(children[child].tagName == 'DIV'){
//target.removeChild[child];
var deleteChild = document.getElementById(target.childNodes[child].id);
deleteChild.parentNode.removeChild(deleteChild);
}
}
}
In a special case i have 4 "Div" as child, this only remove two DIV and not all. I assume as the length is also changing constantly, hence it's not able to get to all children.
Is this correct way of traversal, am i missing something obvious?
You are exactly right: the problem is that you are using a static index when the
NodeList
to which you refer (target.childNodes
) is live: it is updated when you remove some of those child nodes.The simplest way to do this is to make a static list of the child nodes of the element. You seem to be trying to do this, but Javascript has dynamic typing, so
var children = new Array();
essentially does nothing useful. It does not coerce theNodeList
into becoming an array. The function you want isArray.from
:Note that
Array.from
is a new-ish function, so you should provide a shim for older browsers.