THE WORLD'S LARGEST WEB DEVELOPER SITE
HTMLCSSJAVASCRIPTSQLPHPBOOTSTRAPJQUERYANGULARXML
 

XML DOM - Navigating Nodes


Nodes can be navigated using node relationships.

×

Header


Navigating DOM Nodes

Accessing nodes in the node tree via the relationship between nodes, is often called "navigating nodes".

In the XML DOM, node relationships are defined as properties to the nodes:

  • parentNode
  • childNodes
  • firstChild
  • lastChild
  • nextSibling
  • previousSibling

The following image illustrates a part of the node tree and the relationship between nodes in books.xml:

Node tree


DOM - Parent Node

All nodes have exactly one parent node. The following code navigates to the parent node of <book>:

Example

function myFunction(xml) {
var xmlDoc = xml.responseXML;
    var x = xmlDoc.getElementsByTagName("book")[0];
    document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = x.parentNode.nodeName;
}
Try it yourself »

Example explained:

  1. Load "books.xml" into xmlDoc
  2. Get the first <book> element
  3. Output the node name of the parent node of "x"

Avoid Empty Text Nodes

Firefox, and some other browsers, will treat empty white-spaces or new lines as text nodes, Internet Explorer will not.

This causes a problem when using the properties: firstChild, lastChild, nextSibling, previousSibling.

To avoid navigating to empty text nodes (spaces and new-line characters between element nodes), we use a function that checks the node type:

function get_nextSibling(n) {
    var y = n.nextSibling;
    while (y.nodeType! = 1) {
        y = y.nextSibling;
    }
    return y;
}

The function above allows you to use get_nextSibling(node) instead of the property node.nextSibling.

Code explained:

Element nodes are type 1. If the sibling node is not an element node, it moves to the next nodes until an element node is found. This way, the result will be the same in both Internet Explorer and Firefox.


Get the First Child Element

The following code displays the first element node of the first <book>:

Example

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>

<p id="demo"></p>

<script>
var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
��� if (xhttp.readyState == 4 && xhttp.status == 200) {
������� myFunction(xhttp);
��� }
};
xhttp.open("GET", "books.xml", true);
xhttp.send();

function myFunction(xml) {
    var xmlDoc = xml.responseXML;
    var x = get_firstChild(xmlDoc.getElementsByTagName("book")[0]);
    document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = x.nodeName;
}

//check if the first node is an element node
function get_firstChild(n) {
    var y = n.firstChild;
    while (y.nodeType != 1) {
        y = y.nextSibling;
    }
    return y;
}
</script>

</body>
</html>

Output:

title
Try it yourself »

Example explained:

  1. Load "books.xml" into xmlDoc
  2. Use the get_firstChild function on the first <book> element node to get the first child node that is an element node
  3. Output the node name of first child node that is an element node

Examples

More Examples

lastChild()
This example uses the lastChild() method and a custom function to get the last child node of a node

nextSibling()
This example uses the nextSibling() method and a custom function to get the next sibling node of a node

previousSibling()
This example uses the previousSibling() method and a custom function to get the previous sibling node of a node