I'm not sure my current implementation is available all the time:
function isNodeList(nodes) {
var result = Object.prototype.toString.call(nodes);
// modern browser such as IE9 / firefox / chrome etc.
if (result === '[object 开发者_如何学编程HTMLCollection]' || result === '[object NodeList]') {
return true;
}
//ie 6/7/8
if (typeof(nodes) != 'object') {
return false;
}
// detect length and item
if (!('length' in nodes) || !('item' in nodes)) {
return false;
}
// use the trick NodeList(index),all browsers support
try {
if (nodes(0) === null || (nodes(0) && nodes(0).tagName)) return true;
}
catch (e) {
return false;
}
return false;
}
A common situation is {length:1,item:function(){return [];}}
The value of result in chrome / safari / opera is '[object NodeList]'. In firefox and IE 9 , it is '[object HTMLCollection]'.Which is the standard value?
The following should return true, if nodes is of type NodeList
NodeList.prototype.isPrototypeOf(nodes)
@DavidSpector, for HTMLCollection you can similarly use :
HTMLCollection.prototype.isPrototypeOf(collection)
I would structure the code differently:
function isNodeList(nodes) {
var stringRepr = Object.prototype.toString.call(nodes);
return typeof nodes === 'object' &&
/^\[object (HTMLCollection|NodeList|Object)\]$/.test(stringRepr) &&
(typeof nodes.length === 'number') &&
(nodes.length === 0 || (typeof nodes[0] === "object" && nodes[0].nodeType > 0));
}
Notes:
- less return paths make easier-to-read code
- stick with one type of logic, if possible (i.e. use less negated checks)
"item"
is not mandatorily in a nodeList- use
hasOwnProperty()
instead ofin
- use square brackets to index into the list
- I don't think a try/catch is really necessary, but that might be wrong - you decide
- check for
nodeType
instead oftagName
, as text nodes or comments do not have a name - add more checks to the
&&
chain if you see fit
Here is how to test if an object is a NodeList in modern browsers:
if (nodes instanceof NodeList) {
// It's a NodeList object
}
script:
Element.prototype.isNodeList = function() {return false;}
NodeList.prototype.isNodeList = HTMLCollection.prototype.isNodeList = function(){return true;}
use like this:
var d; // HTMLCollection|NodeList|Element
if(d.isNodeList()){
/*
it is HTMLCollection or NodeList
write your code here
*/
}else{
/*
it is not HTMLCollection and NodeList
write your code here
*/
}
Check if variable is an HTMLcollection or a dom element
var foo = document.getElementById('mydiv');
var foo2 = document.getElementsByClassName('divCollection');
console.log(foo instanceof HTMLElement);
console.log(foo instanceof HTMLCollection);
This answer is probably really really late, but....
if (nodes == '[object NodeList]') {
// It's a nodeList
}
I created a benchmark of all answers here to see, what is the best approve in speed. Turns out NodeList.prototype.isPrototypeOf(nodes)
is by far the fastest. But in a normal use-case nodes instanceof NodeList
would be fine too.
I personally would just not pick the isNodeList
function, because its slow, custom and too much overhead.
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