This section defines a set of objects and interfaces for
accessing and manipulating document objects. The functionality
specified in this section (the Core functionality) is
sufficient to allow software developers and web script authors to
access and manipulate parsed HTML and XML content inside conforming
products. The DOM Core API also allows creation and
population of a Document object using only
DOM API calls. A solution for loading a Document and saving it
persistently is proposed in [DOM Level 3 Load and Save].
The DOM presents documents as a hierarchy of Node objects that also
implement other, more specialized interfaces. Some types of nodes
may have child nodes
of various types, and others are leaf nodes that cannot have
anything below them in the document structure. For XML and HTML,
the node types, and which node types they may have as children, are
as follows:
Document -- Element (maximum of
one), ProcessingInstruction,
Comment, DocumentType
(maximum of one)DocumentFragment -- Element, ProcessingInstruction,
Comment, Text, CDATASection, EntityReferenceDocumentType
-- no childrenEntityReference -- Element, ProcessingInstruction,
Comment, Text, CDATASection, EntityReferenceElement -- Element, Text, Comment, ProcessingInstruction,
CDATASection, EntityReferenceAttr -- Text, EntityReferenceProcessingInstruction --
no childrenComment --
no childrenText -- no
childrenCDATASection
-- no childrenEntity -- Element, ProcessingInstruction,
Comment, Text, CDATASection, EntityReferenceNotation -- no
childrenThe DOM also specifies a NodeList interface to
handle ordered lists of Nodes, such as the
children of a Node, or the elements returned by the
getElementsByTagName method of the Element interface, and
also a NamedNodeMap interface
to handle unordered sets of nodes referenced by their name
attribute, such as the attributes of an Element. NodeList and NamedNodeMap objects in
the DOM are live; that is, changes to the underlying
document structure are reflected in all relevant NodeList and NamedNodeMap objects.
For example, if a DOM user gets a NodeList object
containing the children of an Element, then
subsequently adds more children to that element (or removes
children, or modifies them), those changes are automatically
reflected in the NodeList, without further
action on the user's part. Likewise, changes to a Node in the tree are
reflected in all references to that Node in NodeList
and NamedNodeMap
objects.
Finally, the interfaces Text, Comment, and CDATASection all inherit
from the CharacterData
interface.
Most of the APIs defined by this specification are
interfaces rather than classes. That means that an
implementation need only expose methods with the defined names and
specified operation, not implement classes that correspond directly
to the interfaces. This allows the DOM APIs to be implemented as a
thin veneer on top of legacy applications with their own data
structures, or on top of newer applications with different class
hierarchies. This also means that ordinary constructors (in the
Java or C++ sense) cannot be used to create DOM objects, since the
underlying objects to be constructed may have little relationship
to the DOM interfaces. The conventional solution to this in
object-oriented design is to define factory methods that
create instances of objects that implement the various interfaces.
Objects implementing some interface "X" are created by a
"createX()" method on the Document interface; this is
because all DOM objects live in the context of a specific
Document.
The Core DOM APIs are designed to be compatible with a wide range of languages, including both general-user scripting languages and the more challenging languages used mostly by professional programmers. Thus, the DOM APIs need to operate across a variety of memory management philosophies, from language bindings that do not expose memory management to the user at all, through those (notably Java) that provide explicit constructors but provide an automatic garbage collection mechanism to automatically reclaim unused memory, to those (especially C/C++) that generally require the programmer to explicitly allocate object memory, track where it is used, and explicitly free it for re-use. To ensure a consistent API across these platforms, the DOM does not address memory management issues at all, but instead leaves these for the implementation. Neither of the explicit language bindings defined by the DOM API (for ECMAScript and Java) require any memory management methods, but DOM bindings for other languages (especially C or C++) may require such support. These extensions will be the responsibility of those adapting the DOM API to a specific language, not the DOM Working Group.
While it would be nice to have attribute and method names that
are short, informative, internally consistent, and familiar to
users of similar APIs, the names also should not clash with the
names in legacy APIs supported by DOM implementations. Furthermore,
both OMG IDL and ECMAScript have significant
limitations in their ability to disambiguate names from different
namespaces that make it difficult to avoid naming conflicts with
short, familiar names. So, DOM names tend to be long and
descriptive in order to be unique across all environments.
The Working Group has also attempted to be internally consistent in its use of various terms, even though these may not be common distinctions in other APIs. For example, the DOM API uses the method name "remove" when the method changes the structural model, and the method name "delete" when the method gets rid of something inside the structure model. The thing that is deleted is not returned. The thing that is removed may be returned, when it makes sense to return it.
The DOM Core APIs
present two somewhat different sets of interfaces to an XML/HTML
document: one presenting an "object oriented" approach with a
hierarchy of inheritance, and a
"simplified" view that allows all manipulation to be done via the
Node interface
without requiring casts (in Java and other C-like languages) or
query interface calls in COM environments. These
operations are fairly expensive in Java and COM, and the DOM may be
used in performance-critical environments, so we allow significant
functionality using just the Node interface. Because
many other users will find the inheritance hierarchy
easier to understand than the "everything is a Node" approach to
the DOM, we also support the full higher-level interfaces for those
who prefer a more object-oriented API.
In practice, this means that there is a certain amount of
redundancy in the API.
The Working Group considers the "inheritance" approach
the primary view of the API, and the full set of functionality on
Node to be
"extra" functionality that users may employ, but that does not
eliminate the need for methods on other interfaces that an
object-oriented analysis would dictate. (Of course, when the O-O
analysis yields an attribute or method that is identical to one on
the Node interface, we don't
specify a completely redundant one.) Thus, even though there is a
generic nodeName attribute on the Node interface,
there is still a tagName attribute on the Element interface; these
two attributes must contain the same value, but the it is
worthwhile to support both, given the different constituencies the
DOM API must
satisfy.
DOMString typeTo ensure interoperability, the DOM specifies the following:
A DOMString is a
sequence of 16-bit
units.
valuetype DOMString sequence<unsigned short>;
Applications must encode DOMString using UTF-16
(defined in [Unicode 2.0] and Amendment 1 of [ISO/IEC
10646]).
The UTF-16 encoding was chosen because of its widespread
industry practice. Note that for both HTML and XML, the document
character set (and therefore the notation of numeric character
references) is based on UCS [ISO/IEC 10646]. A single numeric
character reference in a source document may therefore in some
cases correspond to two 16-bit units in a DOMString (a high surrogate
and a low surrogate).
Note: Even though the DOM defines the name of the string
type to be DOMString, bindings may use
different names. For example for Java, DOMString is bound to the
String type because it also uses UTF-16 as its
encoding.
Note: As of August 2000, the OMG IDL specification ([OMG
IDL]) included a wstring type. However, that
definition did not meet the interoperability criteria of the DOM API since it relied on
negotiation to decide the width and encoding of a character.
DOMTimeStamp typeTo ensure interoperability, the DOM specifies the following:
A DOMTimeStamp
represents a number of milliseconds.
typedef unsigned long long DOMTimeStamp;
Note: Even though the DOM uses the type DOMTimeStamp, bindings
may use different types. For example for Java, DOMTimeStamp is
bound to the long type. In ECMAScript, DOMTimeStamp is bound to
the Date type because the range of the
integer type is too small.
DOMUserData typeTo ensure interoperability, the DOM specifies the following:
A DOMUserData
represents a reference to an application object.
typedef any DOMUserData;
Note: Even though the DOM uses the type DOMUserData, bindings may
use different types. For example, in Java DOMUserData is bound to
the Object type, while in ECMAScript DOMUserData is bound
to any type.
DOMObject typeTo ensure interoperability, the DOM specifies the following:
A DOMObject
represents a reference to an application object.
typedef Object DOMObject;
Note: Even though the DOM uses the type DOMObject, bindings may use
different types. For example, in Java and ECMAScript DOMObject is
bound to the Object type.
The DOM has many interfaces that imply string matching. HTML
processors generally assume an uppercase (less often, lowercase)
normalization of names for such things as elements, while XML is
explicitly case sensitive. For the purposes of the DOM, string
matching is performed purely by binary comparison of the 16-bit units of
the DOMString. In
addition, the DOM assumes that any case normalizations take place
in the processor, before the DOM structures are built.
The W3C Text normalization, as defined in [CharModel],
is assumed to happen at serialization time. The DOM Level 3 Load
and Save module [DOM Level 3 Load and Save] provides a
serialization mechanism (see the DOMWriter interface,
section 2.3.1) and defines the
"ls-normalize-characters" to assure that text is
serialized in the W3C Text Normalization form. Other serialization
mechanisms built on top of the DOM Level 3 Core also have to assure
that text is serialized in the W3C Text Normalization form.
The DOM Level 2 (and higher) supports XML namespaces [XML Namespaces] by augmenting several interfaces of the DOM Level 1 Core to allow creating and manipulating elements and attributes associated to a namespace.
As far as the DOM is concerned, special attributes used for declaring XML namespaces are still exposed and can be manipulated just like any other attribute. However, nodes are permanently bound to namespace URIs as they get created. Consequently, moving a node within a document, using the DOM, in no case results in a change of its namespace prefix or namespace URI. Similarly, creating a node with a namespace prefix and namespace URI, or changing the namespace prefix of a node, does not result in any addition, removal, or modification of any special attributes for declaring the appropriate XML namespaces. Namespace validation is not enforced; the DOM application is responsible. In particular, since the mapping between prefixes and namespace URIs is not enforced, in general, the resulting document cannot be serialized naively. For example, applications may have to declare every namespace in use when serializing a document.
In general, the DOM implementation (and higher) doesn't perform any URI normalization or canonicalization. The URIs given to the DOM are assumed to be valid (e.g., characters such as white spaces are properly escaped), and no lexical checking is performed. Absolute URI references are treated as strings and compared literally. How relative namespace URI references are treated is undefined. To ensure interoperability only absolute namespace URI references (i.e., URI references beginning with a scheme name and a colon) should be used. Applications should use the value null as the namespaceURI parameter for methods if they wish to have no namespace. In programming languages where empty strings can be differentiated from null, the way empty strings are treated, when given as a namespace URI to a DOM Level 2 method, is implementation dependent. This is true even though the DOM does no lexical checking of URIs.
Note: setAttributeNS(null, ...) put the
attribute in the per-element-type partitions as defined in
XML
Namespace Partitions in [XML Namespaces].
Note: In the DOM, all namespace declaration attributes are by definition bound to the namespace URI: "http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/". These are the attributes whose namespace prefix or qualified name is "xmlns". Although, at the time of writing, this is not part of the XML Namespaces specification [XML Namespaces], it is planned to be incorporated in a future revision.
In a document with no namespaces, the child list of an EntityReference node is
always the same as that of the corresponding Entity. This is not true
in a document where an entity contains unbound namespace prefixes.
In such a case, the descendants of the
corresponding EntityReference nodes may
be bound to different namespace URIs,
depending on where the entity references are. Also, because, in the
DOM, nodes always remain bound to the same namespace URI, moving
such EntityReference nodes can
lead to documents that cannot be serialized. This is also true when
the DOM Level 1 method createEntityReference of the Document interface is
used to create entity references that correspond to such entities,
since the descendants of the
returned EntityReference are
unbound. The DOM Level 2 does not support any mechanism to resolve
namespace prefixes. For all of these reasons, use of such entities
and entity references should be avoided or used with extreme care.
A future Level of the DOM may include some additional support for
handling these.
The new methods, such as createElementNS and
createAttributeNS of the Document interface, are
meant to be used by namespace aware applications. Simple
applications that do not use namespaces can use the DOM Level 1
methods, such as createElement and
createAttribute. Elements and attributes created in
this way do not have any namespace prefix, namespace URI, or local
name.
Note: Given that the property [in-scope namespaces] defined in [XML Information set] is not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core, the properties [prefix] and [namespace name] defined by the Namespace Information Item in [XML Information set] are not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core. However, [DOM Level 3 XPath] does provide a way to access them.
Note: DOM Level 1 methods are namespace ignorant.
Therefore, while it is safe to use these methods when not dealing
with namespaces, using them and the new ones at the same time
should be avoided. DOM Level 1 methods solely identify attribute
nodes by their nodeName. On the contrary, the DOM
Level 2 methods related to namespaces, identify attribute nodes by
their namespaceURI and localName. Because
of this fundamental difference, mixing both sets of methods can
lead to unpredictable results. In particular, using
setAttributeNS, an element may have two
attributes (or more) that have the same nodeName, but
different namespaceURIs. Calling
getAttribute with that nodeName could
then return any of those attributes. The result depends on the
implementation. Similarly, using setAttributeNode, one
can set two attributes (or more) that have different
nodeNames but the same prefix and
namespaceURI. In this case
getAttributeNodeNS will return either attribute, in an
implementation dependent manner. The only guarantee in such cases
is that all methods that access a named item by its
nodeName will access the same item, and all methods
which access a node by its URI and local name will access the same
node. For instance, setAttribute and
setAttributeNS affect the node that
getAttribute and getAttributeNS,
respectively, return.
The DOM Level 3 adds support for the [base URI] property defined
in [XML
Information set] by providing a new attribute on the Node interface that
exposes this information. However, unlike the
namespaceURI attribute, the baseURI
attribute is not a static piece of information that every node
carries. Instead, it is a value that is dynamically computed
according to [XML Base]. This means its value
depends on the location of the node in the tree and moving the node
from one place to another in the tree may affect its value. Other
changes, such as adding or changing an xml:base attribute on the
node being queried or one of its ancestors may also affect its
value.
One consequence of this it that when external entity references
are expanded while building a Document one may need to
add, or update it if one already exists, an xml:base attribute to
the Element nodes
originally contained in the entity being expanded so that the
baseURI returns the correct value. In the case of ProcessingInstruction
nodes originally contained in the entity being expanded the
information is lost. [DOM Level 3 Load and Save] handles
elements as described here and generates a warning in the latter
case.
As new XML vocabularies are developed, those defining the vocabularies are also beginning to define specialized APIs for manipulating XML instances of those vocabularies. This is usually done by extending the DOM to provide interfaces and methods that perform operations frequently needed their users. For example, the MathML [MathML 2.0] and SVG [SVG 1.0] specifications are developing DOM extensions to allow users to manipulate instances of these vocabularies using semantics appropriate to images and mathematics (respectively) as well as the generic DOM XML semantics. Instances of SVG or MathML are often embedded in XML documents conforming to a different schema such as XHTML.
While the XML Namespaces Recommendation provides a mechanism for integrating these documents at the syntax level, it has become clear that the DOM Level 2 Recommendation [DOM Level 2 Core] is not rich enough to cover all the issues that have been encountered in having these different DOM implementations be used together in a single application. DOM Level 3 deals with the requirements brought about by embedding fragments written according to a specific markup language (the embedded component) in a document where the rest of the markup is not written according to that specific markup language (the host document). It does not deal with fragments embedded by reference or linking.
A DOM implementation supporting DOM Level 3 Core should be able to collaborate with subcomponents implementing specific DOMs to assemble a compound document that can be traversed and manipulated via DOM interfaces as if it were a seamless whole.
The normal typecast operation on an object should support the
interfaces expected by legacy code for a given document type.
Typecasting techniques may not be adequate for selecting between
multiple DOM specializations of an object which were combined at
run time, because they may not all be part of the same object as
defined by the binding's object model. Conflicts are most obvious
with the Document
object, since it is shared as owner by the rest of the document. In
a homogeneous document, elements rely on the Document for
specialized services and construction of specialized nodes. In a
heterogeneous document, elements from different modules expect
different services and APIs from the same Document object, since
there can only be one owner and root of the document hierarchy.
Because previous versions of the DOM specification only defined a set of interfaces, applications had to rely on some implementation dependent code to start from. However, hard-coding the application to a specific implementation prevents the application from running on other implementations and from using the most-suitable implementation of the environment. At the same time, implementations may also need to load modules or perform other setup to efficiently adapt to different and sometimes mutually-exclusive feature sets.
To solve these problems this specification introduces a
DOMImplementationRegistry object with a function that
lets an application find implementations, based on the specific
features it requires. How this object is found and what it exactly
looks like is not defined here, because this cannot be done in a
language-independent manner. Instead, each language binding defines
its own way of doing this. See Java Language Binding and ECMAScript Language
Binding for specifics.
In all cases, though, the DOMImplementationRegistry
provides a getDOMImplementation method accepting a
features string, which is passed to every known DOMImplementationSource
until a suitable DOMImplementation is
found and returned. The DOMImplementationRegistry also
provides a getDOMImplementations method accepting a
features string, which is passed to every known DOMImplementationSource,
and returns a list of suitable DOMImplementations. Those
two methods are the same as the ones found on the DOMImplementationSource
interface defined below.
Any number of DOMImplementationSource
objects can be registered. A source may return one or more DOMImplementation
singletons or construct new DOMImplementation
objects, depending upon whether the requested features require
specialized state in the DOMImplementation
object.
getDOMImplementation be called
byFeature instead?The interfaces within this section are considered fundamental, and must be fully implemented by all conforming implementations of the DOM, including all HTML DOM implementations [DOM Level 2 HTML], unless otherwise specified.
A DOM application may use the hasFeature(feature,
version) method of the DOMImplementation
interface with parameter values "Core" and "3.0" (respectively) to
determine whether or not this module is supported by the
implementation. Any implementation that conforms to DOM Level 3 or
a DOM Level 3 module must conform to the Core module. Please refer
to additional information about
conformance in this specification. The DOM Level 3
Core module is backward compatible with the DOM Level 2 Core [DOM Level
2 Core] module, i.e. a DOM Level 3 Core implementation who
returns true for "Core" with the version
number "3.0" must also return true for
this feature when the version number is
"2.0", "" or, null.
DOM operations only raise exceptions in "exceptional"
circumstances, i.e., when an operation is impossible to perform
(either for logical reasons, because data is lost, or because the
implementation has become unstable). In general, DOM methods return
specific error values in ordinary processing situations, such as
out-of-bound errors when using NodeList.
Implementations should raise other exceptions under other
circumstances. For example, implementations should raise an
implementation-dependent exception if a null argument
is passed when null was not expected.
Some languages and object systems do not support the concept of exceptions. For such systems, error conditions may be indicated using native error reporting mechanisms. For some bindings, for example, methods may return error codes similar to those listed in the corresponding method descriptions.
exception DOMException { unsigned short code; }; // ExceptionCode const unsigned short INDEX_SIZE_ERR = 1; const unsigned short DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR = 2; const unsigned short HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR = 3; const unsigned short WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR = 4; const unsigned short INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR = 5; const unsigned short NO_DATA_ALLOWED_ERR = 6; const unsigned short NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR = 7; const unsigned short NOT_FOUND_ERR = 8; const unsigned short NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR = 9; const unsigned short INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR = 10; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: const unsigned short INVALID_STATE_ERR = 11; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: const unsigned short SYNTAX_ERR = 12; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: const unsigned short INVALID_MODIFICATION_ERR = 13; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: const unsigned short NAMESPACE_ERR = 14; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: const unsigned short INVALID_ACCESS_ERR = 15; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: const unsigned short VALIDATION_ERR = 16;
An integer indicating the type of error generated.
Note: Other numeric codes are reserved for W3C for possible future use.
DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERRHIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERRINDEX_SIZE_ERRINUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERRINVALID_ACCESS_ERR, introduced in DOM Level 2.INVALID_CHARACTER_ERRINVALID_MODIFICATION_ERR, introduced in
DOM Level 2.INVALID_STATE_ERR, introduced in DOM Level 2.NAMESPACE_ERR, introduced in DOM Level 2.NOT_FOUND_ERRNOT_SUPPORTED_ERRNO_DATA_ALLOWED_ERRNO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERRSYNTAX_ERR, introduced in DOM Level 2.VALIDATION_ERR, introduced in DOM Level 3.insertBefore or
removeChild would make the Node invalid with
respect to "partial
validity", this exception would be raised and the
operation would not be done. This code is used in [DOM Level 3
Validation]. Refer to this specification for further
information.WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERRThe DOMStringList interface provides the
abstraction of an ordered collection of parallel pairs of name and
namespace values, without defining or constraining how this
collection is implemented. The items in the
DOMStringList are accessible via an integral index,
starting from 0.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMStringList { DOMString item(in unsigned long index); readonly attribute unsigned long length; };
The NameList interface provides the abstraction of
an ordered collection of parallel pairs of name and namespace
values, without defining or constraining how this collection is
implemented. The items in the NameList are accessible
via an integral index, starting from 0.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface NameList { DOMString getName(in unsigned long index) raises(DOMException); DOMString getNamespaceURI(in unsigned long index) raises(DOMException); readonly attribute unsigned long length; };
length of type unsigned
long, readonlylength-1
inclusive.getNameindexth name item in
the collection.
index of type
unsigned long|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: If |
getNamespaceURIindexth namespaceURI
item in the collection.
index of type
unsigned long|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: If |
The DOMImplementationList interface provides the
abstraction of an ordered collection of DOM implementations,
without defining or constraining how this collection is
implemented. The items in the DOMImplementationList
are accessible via an integral index, starting from 0.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMImplementationList { DOMImplementation item(in unsigned long index); readonly attribute unsigned long length; };
length of type
unsigned long, readonlyDOMImplementations in the
list. The range of valid child node indices is 0 to
length-1 inclusive.itemindexth item in the
collection. If index is greater than or equal to the
number of DOMImplementations in the
list, this returns null.
index of type
unsigned long|
The |
This interface permits a DOM implementer to supply one or more
implementations, based upon requested features. Each implemented
DOMImplementationSource object is listed in the
binding-specific list of available sources so that its DOMImplementation objects
are made available.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMImplementationSource { DOMImplementation getDOMImplementation(in DOMString features); DOMImplementationList getDOMImplementations(in DOMString features); };
getDOMImplementationfeatures of type DOMString|
The first DOM implementation that support the desired features,
or |
getDOMImplementationsfeatures of type DOMString|
A list of DOM implementations that support the desired features. |
The DOMImplementation interface provides a number
of methods for performing operations that are independent of any
particular instance of the document object model.
interface DOMImplementation { boolean hasFeature(in DOMString feature, in DOMString version); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: DocumentType createDocumentType(in DOMString qualifiedName, in DOMString publicId, in DOMString systemId) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Document createDocument(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString qualifiedName, in DocumentType doctype) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: Node getFeature(in DOMString feature, in DOMString version); };
createDocument
introduced in DOM Level 2DocumentType given to
create the document, the implementation may instantiate specialized
Document objects
that support additional features than the "Core", such as "HTML"
[DOM
Level 2 HTML]. On the other hand, setting the DocumentType after
the document was created makes this very unlikely to happen.
Alternatively, specialized Document creation methods,
such as createHTMLDocument [DOM Level 2
HTML], can be used to obtain specific types of Document
objects.
namespaceURI of type DOMStringnull.qualifiedName of type DOMStringnull.doctype of type DocumentTypenull.doctype is not null, its Node.ownerDocument
attribute is set to the document being created.|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified qualified name contains an illegal character. NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
createDocumentType
introduced in DOM Level 2DocumentType node. Entity
declarations and notations are not made available. Entity reference
expansions and default attribute additions do not occur..
qualifiedName of type DOMStringpublicId of type DOMStringsystemId of type DOMString|
A new |
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified qualified name contains an illegal character. NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
getFeature
introduced in DOM Level 3DOMImplementation interface.
feature of type DOMStringversion of type DOMStringnull or the empty string, supporting any
version of the feature will cause the method to return an object
that supports at least one version of the feature.|
Returns an object which implements the specialized APIs of the
specified feature and version, if any, or |
hasFeaturefeature of type DOMStringversion of type DOMStringnull or empty string, supporting any version of the
feature causes the method to return true.|
|
|
DocumentFragment is a "lightweight" or "minimal" Document object. It is
very common to want to be able to extract a portion of a document's
tree or to create a new fragment of a document. Imagine
implementing a user command like cut or rearranging a document by
moving fragments around. It is desirable to have an object which
can hold such fragments and it is quite natural to use a Node for
this purpose. While it is true that a Document object could
fulfill this role, a Document object can
potentially be a heavyweight object, depending on the underlying
implementation. What is really needed for this is a very
lightweight object. DocumentFragment is such an
object.
Furthermore, various operations -- such as inserting nodes as
children of another Node -- may take
DocumentFragment objects as arguments; this results in
all the child nodes of the DocumentFragment being
moved to the child list of this node.
The children of a DocumentFragment node are zero or
more nodes representing the tops of any sub-trees defining the
structure of the document. DocumentFragment nodes do
not need to be well-formed XML
documents (although they do need to follow the rules
imposed upon well-formed XML parsed entities, which can have
multiple top nodes). For example, a DocumentFragment
might have only one child and that child node could be a Text node. Such a
structure model represents neither an HTML document nor a
well-formed XML document.
When a DocumentFragment is inserted into a Document (or indeed any
other Node that
may take children) the children of the
DocumentFragment and not the
DocumentFragment itself are inserted into the Node. This makes the
DocumentFragment very useful when the user wishes to
create nodes that are siblings; the
DocumentFragment acts as the parent of these nodes so
that the user can use the standard methods from the Node
interface, such as insertBefore and
appendChild.
Note: The properties [notations] and [unparsed entities]
defined by the Document Information Item in [XML Information
set] are accessible through the DocumentType interface.
The property [all declarations processed] is not accessible through
the DOM API.
interface DocumentFragment : Node { };
The Document interface represents the entire HTML
or XML document. Conceptually, it is the root of the document
tree, and provides the primary access to the document's data.
Since elements, text nodes, comments, processing instructions,
etc. cannot exist outside the context of a Document,
the Document interface also contains the factory
methods needed to create these objects. The Node objects created
have a ownerDocument attribute which associates them
with the Document within whose context they were
created.
interface Document : Node { // Modified in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute DocumentType doctype; readonly attribute DOMImplementation implementation; readonly attribute Element documentElement; Element createElement(in DOMString tagName) raises(DOMException); DocumentFragment createDocumentFragment(); Text createTextNode(in DOMString data); Comment createComment(in DOMString data); CDATASection createCDATASection(in DOMString data) raises(DOMException); ProcessingInstruction createProcessingInstruction(in DOMString target, in DOMString data) raises(DOMException); Attr createAttribute(in DOMString name) raises(DOMException); EntityReference createEntityReference(in DOMString name) raises(DOMException); NodeList getElementsByTagName(in DOMString tagname); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Node importNode(in Node importedNode, in boolean deep) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Element createElementNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString qualifiedName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Attr createAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString qualifiedName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: NodeList getElementsByTagNameNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Element getElementById(in DOMString elementId); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString actualEncoding; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString encoding; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute boolean standalone; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString version; // raises(DOMException) on setting // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute boolean strictErrorChecking; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString documentURI; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: Node adoptNode(in Node source) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute DOMConfiguration config; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: void normalizeDocument(); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: Node renameNode(in Node n, in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString qualifiedName) raises(DOMException); };
actualEncoding of type
DOMString,
introduced in DOM Level 3null otherwise.config of type DOMConfiguration,
readonly, introduced in DOM Level 3Document.normalizeDocument
is invoked.doctype of type DocumentType, readonly,
modified in DOM Level 3DocumentType) associated
with this document. For HTML documents as well as XML documents
without a document type declaration this returns
null.DocumentType node, child
node of this Document. This node can be set at
document creation time and later changed through the use of child
nodes manipulation methods, such as insertBefore, or
replaceChild. Note, however, that while some
implementations may instantiate different types of
Document objects supporting additional features than
the "Core", such as "HTML" [DOM Level 2 HTML], based on the DocumentType specified at
creation time, changing it afterwards is very unlikely to result in
a change of the features supported.documentElement of type Element, readonlydocumentURI of type DOMString, introduced
in DOM Level 3null if
undefined.Document supports the feature
"HTML" [DOM Level 2 HTML], the href
attribute of the HTML BASE element takes precedence over this
attribute.encoding of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 3null when
unspecified.implementation of type DOMImplementation,
readonlyDOMImplementation object
that handles this document. A DOM application may use objects from
multiple implementations.standalone of type
boolean, introduced in DOM Level
3strictErrorChecking of
type boolean, introduced in DOM
Level 3false, the implementation is free to
not test every possible error case normally defined on DOM
operations, and not raise any DOMException. In case of
error, the behavior is undefined. This attribute is
true by default.version of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 3null when
unspecified.|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if the version is set to a value that
is not supported by this |
adoptNode introduced in DOM Level 3ownerDocument of a
node, its children, as well as the attached attribute nodes if
there are any. If the node has a parent it is first removed from
its parent child list. This effectively allows moving a subtree
from one document to another. The following list describes the
specifics for each type of node.
ownerElement attribute is set to
null and the specified flag is set to
true on the adopted Attr. The descendants of
the source Attr are recursively
adopted.Document nodes cannot be adopted.DocumentType
nodes cannot be adopted.Attr nodes. Default
attributes are discarded, though if the document being adopted into
defines default attributes for this element name, those are
assigned. The descendants of the source element are recursively
adopted.Entity nodes
cannot be adopted.EntityReference node
itself is adopted, the descendants are discarded, since the source
and destination documents might have defined the entity
differently. If the document being imported into provides a
definition for this entity name, its value is assigned.Notation nodes
cannot be adopted.source of type Node|
The adopted node, or |
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if the source node is of type
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the source node is readonly. |
createAttributeAttr of the given name.
Note that the Attr instance can then be
set on an Element
using the setAttributeNode method.createAttributeNS method.
name of type DOMString|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified name contains an illegal character. |
createAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 2null as the namespaceURI
parameter for methods if they wish to have no namespace.
namespaceURI of type DOMStringqualifiedName of type DOMString|
A new
|
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified
NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Always thrown if the current document does
not support the |
createCDATASectionCDATASection node whose
value is the specified string.
data of type DOMStringCDATASection
contents.|
The new |
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if this document is an HTML document. |
createCommentcreateDocumentFragmentDocumentFragment object.
|
A new |
createElementElement interface, so
attributes can be specified directly on the returned object.Attr nodes
representing them are automatically created and attached to the
element.createElementNS method.
tagName of type DOMString|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified name contains an illegal character. |
createElementNS introduced in DOM Level 2null as the namespaceURI parameter for
methods if they wish to have no namespace.
namespaceURI of type DOMStringqualifiedName of type DOMString|
A new
|
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified
NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Always thrown if the current document does
not support the |
createEntityReferenceEntityReference object. In
addition, if the referenced entity is known, the child list of the
EntityReference node is
made the same as that of the corresponding Entity node.
Note: If any descendant of the Entity node has an unbound
namespace
prefix, the corresponding descendant of the created EntityReference node
is also unbound; (its namespaceURI is
null). The DOM Level 2 and 3 do not support any
mechanism to resolve namespace prefixes in this case.
name of type DOMString|
The new |
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified name contains an illegal character. NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if this document is an HTML document. |
createProcessingInstructionProcessingInstruction
node given the specified name and data strings.
|
The new |
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified target contains an illegal character. NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if this document is an HTML document. |
createTextNodegetElementById introduced in DOM Level 2Element that has an ID
attribute with the given value. If no such element exists, this
returns null. If more than one element has an ID
attribute with that value, what is returned is undefined.setIdAttribute method and its siblings on Element. To query whether
an attribute is of type ID see isId on Attr.
Note: Attributes with the name "ID" or "id" are not of type ID unless so defined.
elementId of type DOMStringid value for an element.|
The matching element or |
getElementsByTagNameNodeList of all the Elements in document order with
a given tag name and are contained in the document.
tagname of type DOMStringgetElementsByTagNameNS introduced in DOM Level 2NodeList of all the Elements with a
given local name
and namespace
URI in document order.
namespaceURI of type DOMString"*" matches all namespaces.localName of type DOMStringimportNode introduced in
DOM Level 2parentNode
is null). The source node is not altered or removed
from the original document; this method creates a new copy of the
source node.nodeName and nodeType, plus the
attributes related to namespaces (prefix,
localName, and namespaceURI). As in the
cloneNode operation, the source node is not altered.
User data associated to the imported node is not carried over.
However, if any UserDataHandlers has
been specified along with the associated data these handlers will
be called with the appropriate parameters before this method
returns.nodeType, attempting to mirror the behavior expected
if a fragment of XML or HTML source was copied from one document to
another, recognizing that the two documents may have different DTDs
in the XML case. The following list describes the specifics for
each type of node.
ownerElement attribute is set to
null and the specified flag is set to
true on the generated Attr. The descendants of the
source Attr are recursively
imported and the resulting nodes reassembled to form the
corresponding subtree.deep parameter has no effect on Attr nodes; they always
carry their children with them when imported.deep option was set to true,
the descendants
of the source DocumentFragment are
recursively imported and the resulting nodes reassembled under the
imported DocumentFragment to form
the corresponding subtree. Otherwise, this simply generates an
empty DocumentFragment.Document nodes cannot be imported.DocumentType
nodes cannot be imported.Attr nodes are attached
to the generated Element. Default
attributes are not copied, though if the document being
imported into defines default attributes for this element name,
those are assigned. If the importNode
deep parameter was set to true, the descendants of the
source element are recursively imported and the resulting nodes
reassembled to form the corresponding subtree.Entity nodes
can be imported, however in the current release of the DOM the DocumentType is
readonly. Ability to add these imported nodes to a DocumentType will be
considered for addition to a future release of the DOM.publicId, systemId, and
notationName attributes are copied. If a
deep import is requested, the descendants of the the
source Entity are
recursively imported and the resulting nodes reassembled to form
the corresponding subtree.EntityReference itself is
copied, even if a deep import is requested, since the
source and destination documents might have defined the entity
differently. If the document being imported into provides a
definition for this entity name, its value is assigned.Notation nodes
can be imported, however in the current release of the DOM the DocumentType is
readonly. Ability to add these imported nodes to a DocumentType will be
considered for addition to a future release of the DOM.publicId and systemId
attributes are copied.deep parameter has no effect on this
type of nodes since they cannot have any children.target and
data values from those of the source node.deep parameter has no effect on this
type of nodes since they cannot have any children.CharacterData copy their
data and length attributes from those of
the source node.deep parameter has no effect on these
types of nodes since they cannot have any children.importedNode of type Nodedeep of type
booleantrue, recursively import the subtree under the
specified node; if false, import only the node itself,
as explained above. This has no effect on nodes that cannot have
any children, and on Attr, and EntityReference
nodes.|
The imported node that belongs to this
|
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised if the type of node being imported is not supported. INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if one the imported names contain an illegal character. This may happen when importing an XML 1.1 [XML 1.1] element into an XML 1.0 document, for instance. |
normalizeDocument
introduced in DOM Level 3DOMConfiguration for
details.Text nodes, makes the
document "namespace wellformed", according to the algorithm
described in Namespace
normalization, by adding missing namespace declaration
attributes and adding or changing namespace prefixes, updates the
replacement tree of EntityReference nodes,
normalizes attribute values, etc.renameNode introduced in DOM Level 3ELEMENT_NODE or ATTRIBUTE_NODE.Element its attributes
are moved to the new node, the new node is inserted at the position
the old node used to have in its parent's child nodes list if it
has one, the user data that was attached to the old node is
attached to the new node.Element only the
specified attributes are moved, default attributes originated from
the DTD are updated according to the new element name. In addition,
the implementation may update default attributes from other
schemas. Applications should use normalizeDocument() to guarantee
these attributes are up-to-date.Attr that is attached to
an Element, the
node is first removed from the Element attributes map.
Then, once renamed, either by modifying the existing node or
creating a new one as described above, it is put back.NODE_RENAMED is fired,DOMElementNameChanged or
DOMAttributeNameChanged is fired.n of type NodenamespaceURI of type DOMStringqualifiedName of type DOMString|
The renamed node. This is either the specified node or the new node that was created to replace the specified node. |
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised when the type of the specified node is
neither WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised when the specified node was created from a different document than this document. NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the |
The Node interface is the primary datatype for the
entire Document Object Model. It represents a single node in the
document tree. While all objects implementing the Node
interface expose methods for dealing with children, not all objects
implementing the Node interface may have children. For
example, Text
nodes may not have children, and adding children to such nodes
results in a DOMException being
raised.
The attributes nodeName, nodeValue and
attributes are included as a mechanism to get at node
information without casting down to the specific derived interface.
In cases where there is no obvious mapping of these attributes for
a specific nodeType (e.g., nodeValue for
an Element or
attributes for a Comment), this returns
null. Note that the specialized interfaces may contain
additional and more convenient mechanisms to get and set the
relevant information.
interface Node { // NodeType const unsigned short ELEMENT_NODE = 1; const unsigned short ATTRIBUTE_NODE = 2; const unsigned short TEXT_NODE = 3; const unsigned short CDATA_SECTION_NODE = 4; const unsigned short ENTITY_REFERENCE_NODE = 5; const unsigned short ENTITY_NODE = 6; const unsigned short PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODE = 7; const unsigned short COMMENT_NODE = 8; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_NODE = 9; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_TYPE_NODE = 10; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT_NODE = 11; const unsigned short NOTATION_NODE = 12; readonly attribute DOMString nodeName; attribute DOMString nodeValue; // raises(DOMException) on setting // raises(DOMException) on retrieval readonly attribute unsigned short nodeType; readonly attribute Node parentNode; readonly attribute NodeList childNodes; readonly attribute Node firstChild; readonly attribute Node lastChild; readonly attribute Node previousSibling; readonly attribute Node nextSibling; readonly attribute NamedNodeMap attributes; // Modified in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute Document ownerDocument; // Modified in DOM Level 3: Node insertBefore(in Node newChild, in Node refChild) raises(DOMException); // Modified in DOM Level 3: Node replaceChild(in Node newChild, in Node oldChild) raises(DOMException); // Modified in DOM Level 3: Node removeChild(in Node oldChild) raises(DOMException); Node appendChild(in Node newChild) raises(DOMException); boolean hasChildNodes(); Node cloneNode(in boolean deep); // Modified in DOM Level 2: void normalize(); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: boolean isSupported(in DOMString feature, in DOMString version); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute DOMString namespaceURI; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: attribute DOMString prefix; // raises(DOMException) on setting // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute DOMString localName; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: boolean hasAttributes(); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute DOMString baseURI; // DocumentPosition const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_DISCONNECTED = 0x01; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_PRECEDING = 0x02; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_FOLLOWING = 0x04; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_CONTAINS = 0x08; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_IS_CONTAINED = 0x10; const unsigned short DOCUMENT_POSITION_IMPLEMENTATION_SPECIFIC = 0x20; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: unsigned short compareDocumentPosition(in Node other) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString textContent; // raises(DOMException) on setting // raises(DOMException) on retrieval // Introduced in DOM Level 3: boolean isSameNode(in Node other); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: DOMString lookupPrefix(in DOMString namespaceURI); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: boolean isDefaultNamespace(in DOMString namespaceURI); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: DOMString lookupNamespaceURI(in DOMString prefix); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: boolean isEqualNode(in Node arg); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: Node getFeature(in DOMString feature, in DOMString version); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: DOMUserData setUserData(in DOMString key, in DOMUserData data, in UserDataHandler handler); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: DOMUserData getUserData(in DOMString key); };
An integer indicating which type of node this is.
Note: Numeric codes up to 200 are reserved to W3C for possible future use.
ATTRIBUTE_NODEAttr.CDATA_SECTION_NODECDATASection.COMMENT_NODEComment.DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT_NODEDocumentFragment.DOCUMENT_NODEDocument.DOCUMENT_TYPE_NODEDocumentType.ELEMENT_NODEElement.ENTITY_NODEEntity.ENTITY_REFERENCE_NODEEntityReference.NOTATION_NODENotation.PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODEProcessingInstruction.TEXT_NODEText node.The values of nodeName, nodeValue, and
attributes vary according to the node type as
follows:
| Interface | nodeName | nodeValue | attributes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attr | name of attribute | value of attribute | null |
| CDATASection |
"#cdata-section" |
content of the CDATA Section | null |
| Comment |
"#comment" |
content of the comment | null |
| Document |
"#document" |
null | null |
| DocumentFragment |
"#document-fragment" |
null | null |
| DocumentType | document type name | null | null |
| Element | tag name | null | NamedNodeMap |
| Entity | entity name | null | null |
| EntityReference | name of entity referenced | null | null |
| Notation | notation name | null | null |
| ProcessingInstruction | target | entire content excluding the target | null |
| Text | "#text" |
content of the text node | null |
A bitmask indicating the relative document position of a node with respect to another node.
If the two nodes being compared are the same node, then no flags are set on the return.
Otherwise, the order of two nodes is determined by looking for common containers -- containers which contain both. A node directly contains any child nodes. A node also directly contains any other nodes attached to it such as attributes contained in an element or entities and notations contained in a document type. Nodes contained in contained nodes are also contained, but less-directly as the number of intervening containers increases.
If there is no common container node, then the order is based upon order between the root container of each node that is in no container. In this case, the result is disconnected and implementation-specific. This result is stable as long as these outer-most containing nodes remain in memory and are not inserted into some other containing node. This would be the case when the nodes belong to different documents or fragments, and cloning the document or inserting a fragment might change the order.
If one of the nodes being compared contains the other node, then the container precedes the contained node, and reversely the contained node follows the container. For example, when comparing an element against its own attribute or child, the element node precedes its attribute node and its child node, which both follow it.
If neither of the previous cases apply, then there exists a most-direct container common to both nodes being compared. In this case, the order is determined based upon the two determining nodes directly contained in this most-direct common container that either are or contain the corresponding nodes being compared.
If these two determining nodes are both child nodes, then the natural DOM order of these determining nodes within the containing node is returned as the order of the corresponding nodes. This would be the case, for example, when comparing two child elements of the same element.
If one of the two determining nodes is a child node and the other is not, then the corresponding node of the child node follows the corresponding node of the non-child node. This would be the case, for example, when comparing an attribute of an element with a child element of the same element.
If neither of the two determining node is a child node and one
determining node has a greater value of nodeType than
the other, then the corresponding node precedes the other. This
would be the case, for example, when comparing an entity of a
document type against a notation of the same document type.
If neither of the two determining node is a child node and
nodeType is the same for both determining nodes, then
an implementation-dependent order between the determining nodes is
returned. This order is stable as long as no nodes of the same
nodeType are inserted into or removed from the direct container.
This would be the case, for example, when comparing two attributes
of the same element, and inserting or removing additional
attributes might change the order between existing attributes.
DOCUMENT_POSITION_CONTAINSDOCUMENT_POSITION_DISCONNECTEDDOCUMENT_POSITION_FOLLOWINGDOCUMENT_POSITION_IMPLEMENTATION_SPECIFICDOCUMENT_POSITION_IS_CONTAINEDDOCUMENT_POSITION_PRECEDINGattributes of type NamedNodeMap,
readonlyNamedNodeMap containing
the attributes of this node (if it is an Element) or
null otherwise.baseURI of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 3null if
undefined. This value is computed according to [XML Base].
However, when the Document supports the
feature "HTML" [DOM Level 2 HTML], the base URI is
computed using first the value of the href attribute of the HTML
BASE element if any, and the value of the documentURI
attribute from the Document interface
otherwise.Element, a
Document or a a ProcessingInstruction,
this attribute represents the properties [base URI] defined in [XML
Information set]. When the node is a Notation, an Entity, or an EntityReference
representing an unexpanded entity reference or an internal entity
reference, this attribute represents the properties [declaration
base URI] in the [XML Information set] . When the node
is an EntityReference representing an external entity reference
this is the absolute URI of the entity.
childNodes of type NodeList, readonlyNodeList
that contains all children of this node. If there are no children,
this is a NodeList containing no
nodes.Document, or
an Element, and
if the NodeList
does not contain EntityReference or CDATASection nodes,
this attribute represents the properties [children] defined in [XML
Information set].firstChild of type Node, readonlynull.lastChild of type Node, readonlynull.localName of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2Element,
or Attr, this
attribute represents the properties [local name] defined in [XML
Information set].ELEMENT_NODE and
ATTRIBUTE_NODE and nodes created with a DOM Level 1
method, such as createElement from the Document interface, this is
always null.namespaceURI of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2null if it is
unspecified.Element, or Attr, this attribute
represents the properties [namespace name] defined in [XML Information
set].ELEMENT_NODE and
ATTRIBUTE_NODE and nodes created with a DOM Level 1
method, such as createElement from the Document interface, this is
always null.
Note: Per the Namespaces in XML Specification [XML Namespaces] an attribute does not inherit its namespace from the element it is attached to. If an attribute is not explicitly given a namespace, it simply has no namespace.
nextSibling of type Node, readonlynull.nodeName of type DOMString, readonlynodeType of type unsigned
short, readonlynodeValue of type DOMStringnull, setting it has
no effect, including if the node is read-only.|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the node is readonly
and if it is not defined to be |
|
DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR: Raised when it would return more characters
than fit in a |
ownerDocument of type Document, readonly,
modified in DOM Level 2Document
object associated with this node. This is also the Document
object used to create new nodes. When this node is a Document or a
DocumentType
which is not used with any Document yet, this is
null.parentNode of type Node, readonlyAttr, Document, DocumentFragment, Entity, and Notation may have a
parent. However, if a node has just been created and not yet added
to the tree, or if it has been removed from the tree, this is
null.Element, a ProcessingInstruction,
an EntityReference, a CharacterData, a Comment, or a DocumentType, this
attribute represents the properties [parent] defined in [XML Information
set].prefix of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 2null if it is
unspecified.Element, or Attr, this attribute
represents the properties [prefix] defined in [XML Information
set].nodeName attribute, which holds the qualified name, as
well as the tagName and name attributes
of the Element
and Attr
interfaces, when applicable.null makes it unspecified,
setting it to an empty string is implementation dependent.namespaceURI and localName do not
change.ELEMENT_NODE and
ATTRIBUTE_NODE and nodes created with a DOM Level 1
method, such as createElement from the Document interface, this is
always null.|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified prefix contains an illegal character. NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the specified |
previousSibling of type Node, readonlynull.textContent of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 3Text node containing the
string this attribute is set to. On getting, no serialization is
performed, the returned string does not contain any markup. No
whitespace normalization is performed, the returned string does not
contain the element content whitespaces Fundamental
Interfaces. Similarly, on setting, no parsing is performed
either, the input string is taken as pure textual content.| Node type | Content |
|---|---|
| ELEMENT_NODE, ENTITY_NODE, ENTITY_REFERENCE_NODE, DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT_NODE | concatenation of the
textContent attribute value of every child node,
excluding COMMENT_NODE and PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODE nodes. This
is the empty string if the node has no children. |
| ATTRIBUTE_NODE, TEXT_NODE, CDATA_SECTION_NODE, COMMENT_NODE, PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODE |
nodeValue |
| DOCUMENT_NODE, DOCUMENT_TYPE_NODE, NOTATION_NODE | null |
|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the node is readonly. |
|
DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR: Raised when it would return more characters
than fit in a |
appendChildnewChild to the end
of the list of children of this node. If the newChild
is already in the tree, it is first removed.
newChild of type NodeDocumentFragment object,
the entire contents of the document fragment are moved into the
child list of this node|
The node added. |
|
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR: Raised if this node is of a type that
does not allow children of the type of the WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly or if the previous parent of the node being inserted is readonly. |
cloneNodeparentNode is null.) and no user
data. User data associated to the imported node is not carried
over. However, if any UserDataHandlers has
been specified along with the associated data these handlers will
be called with the appropriate parameters before this method
returns.Element copies all
attributes and their values, including those generated by the XML
processor to represent defaulted attributes, but this method does
not copy any children it contains unless it is a deep clone. This
includes text contained in an the Element since the text is
contained in a child Text node. Cloning an
Attribute directly, as opposed to be cloned as part of
an Element cloning
operation, returns a specified attribute (specified is
true). Cloning an Attribute always clones
its children, since they represent its value, no matter whether
this is a deep clone or not. Cloning an EntityReference
automatically constructs its subtree if a corresponding Entity is available, no
matter whether this is a deep clone or not. Cloning any other type
of node simply returns a copy of this node.EntityReference clone are
readonly. In
addition, clones of unspecified Attr nodes are specified.
And, cloning Document, DocumentType, Entity, and Notation nodes is
implementation dependent.
deep of type
booleantrue, recursively clone the subtree under the
specified node; if false, clone only the node itself
(and its attributes, if it is an Element).|
The duplicate node. |
compareDocumentPosition
introduced in DOM Level 3other of type Node|
|
Returns how the given node is positioned relatively to this node. |
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: when the compared nodes are from different DOM implementations that do not coordinate to return consistent implementation-specific results. |
getFeature introduced in DOM Level 3Node interface.
feature of type DOMStringversion of type DOMStringnull or the empty string, supporting any
version of the feature will cause the method to return an object
that supports at least one version of the feature.|
Returns an object which implements the specialized APIs of the
specified feature and version, if any, or |
getUserData introduced in DOM Level 3setUserData with the same key.
key of type DOMString|
Returns the |
hasAttributes introduced in DOM Level 2|
|
Returns |
hasChildNodes|
|
Returns |
insertBefore modified in DOM Level 3newChild before
the existing child node refChild. If
refChild is null, insert
newChild at the end of the list of children.newChild is a DocumentFragment object,
all of its children are inserted, in the same order, before
refChild. If the newChild is already in
the tree, it is first removed.
|
The node being inserted. |
|
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR: Raised if this node is of a type that
does not allow children of the type of the WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly or if the parent of the node being inserted is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: if this node if of type |
isDefaultNamespace
introduced in DOM Level 3namespaceURI is the default namespace or not.
namespaceURI of type DOMString|
|
Returns |
isEqualNode introduced in DOM Level 3Node.isSameNode. All
nodes that are the same will also be equal, though the reverse may
not be true.nodeName, localName,
namespaceURI, prefix,
nodeValue. This is: they are both null,
or they have the same length and are character for character
identical.attributes NamedNodeMaps are equal.
This is: they are both null, or they have the same
length and for each node that exists in one map there is a node
that exists in the other map and is equal, although not necessarily
at the same index.childNodes NodeLists are equal. This
is: they are both null, or they have the same length
and contain equal nodes at the same index. Note that normalization
can affect equality; to avoid this, nodes should be normalized
before being compared.DocumentType nodes to be
equal, the following conditions must also be satisfied:
publicId, systemId,
internalSubset.entities NamedNodeMaps are
equal.notations NamedNodeMaps are
equal.ownerDocument, baseURI, and
parentNode attributes, the specified and
attribute for Attr nodes, the
schemaTypeInfo attribute for Attr and Element nodes, the
isWhitespaceInElementContent attribute for Text nodes, as well as
any user data or event listeners registered on the nodes.
Note: As a general rule, anything not mentioned in the description above is not significant in consideration of equality checking. Note that future versions of this specification may take into account more attributes and implementations conform to this specification are expected to be updated accordingly.
arg of type Node|
|
Returns |
isSameNode introduced in DOM Level 3Node references returned by the implementation
reference the same object. When two Node references
are references to the same object, even if through a proxy, the
references may be used completely interchangeably, such that all
attributes have the same values and calling the same DOM method on
either reference always has exactly the same effect.
other of type Node|
|
Returns |
isSupported introduced
in DOM Level 2feature of type DOMStringhasFeature on DOMImplementation.version of type DOMStringnull or empty string, supporting any version of the
feature will cause the method to return true.|
|
Returns |
lookupNamespaceURI
introduced in DOM Level 3prefix of type DOMStringnull,
the method will return the default namespace URI if any.|
Returns the associated namespace URI or |
lookupPrefix
introduced in DOM Level 3namespaceURI of type DOMString|
Returns an associated namespace prefix if found or
|
normalize modified in DOM Level 2Text nodes in the full
depth of the sub-tree underneath this Node, including
attribute nodes, into a "normal" form where only structure (e.g.,
elements, comments, processing instructions, CDATA sections, and
entity references) separates Text nodes, i.e., there
are neither adjacent Text nodes nor empty Text
nodes. This can be used to ensure that the DOM view of a document
is the same as if it were saved and re-loaded, and is useful when
operations (such as XPointer [XPointer] lookups) that depend on a
particular document tree structure are to be used.
Note: In cases where the document contains CDATASections, the
normalize operation alone may not be sufficient, since XPointers do
not differentiate between Text nodes and CDATASection nodes.
removeChild modified in DOM Level 3oldChild from the list of children, and returns it.
oldChild of type Node|
The node removed. |
|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: if this node is of type |
replaceChild modified in DOM Level 3oldChild
with newChild in the list of children, and returns the
oldChild node.newChild is a DocumentFragment object,
oldChild is replaced by all of the DocumentFragment
children, which are inserted in the same order. If the
newChild is already in the tree, it is first removed.
|
The node replaced. |
|
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR: Raised if this node is of a type that
does not allow children of the type of the WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node or the parent of the new node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: if this node is of type |
setUserData introduced in DOM Level 3getUserData with the same key.
key of type DOMStringdata of type DOMUserDatanull
to remove any existing association to that key.handler of type UserDataHandlernull.|
Returns the |
The NodeList interface provides the abstraction of
an ordered collection of nodes, without defining or constraining
how this collection is implemented. NodeList objects
in the DOM are live.
The items in the NodeList are accessible via an
integral index, starting from 0.
length of type unsigned
long, readonlylength-1 inclusive.itemindexth item in the
collection. If index is greater than or equal to the
number of nodes in the list, this returns null.
index of type
unsigned long|
The node at the |
Objects implementing the NamedNodeMap interface are
used to represent collections of nodes that can be accessed by
name. Note that NamedNodeMap does not inherit from NodeList;
NamedNodeMaps are not maintained in any particular
order. Objects contained in an object implementing
NamedNodeMap may also be accessed by an ordinal index,
but this is simply to allow convenient enumeration of the contents
of a NamedNodeMap, and does not imply that the DOM
specifies an order to these Nodes.
NamedNodeMap objects in the DOM are live.
interface NamedNodeMap { Node getNamedItem(in DOMString name); Node setNamedItem(in Node arg) raises(DOMException); Node removeNamedItem(in DOMString name) raises(DOMException); Node item(in unsigned long index); readonly attribute unsigned long length; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Node getNamedItemNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Node setNamedItemNS(in Node arg) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Node removeNamedItemNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); };
length of type unsigned long,
readonly0 to length-1 inclusive.getNamedItemgetNamedItemNS introduced in DOM Level 2namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
itemindexth item in the
map. If index is greater than or equal to the number
of nodes in this map, this returns null.
index of type
unsigned long|
The node at the |
removeNamedItemname of type DOMStringnodeName of the node to remove.|
The node removed from this map if a node with such a name exists. |
|
NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if there is no node named
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this map is readonly. |
removeNamedItemNS introduced in
DOM Level 2Node interface. If so,
an attribute immediately appears containing the default value as
well as the corresponding namespace URI, local name, and prefix
when applicable.namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
The node removed from this map if a node with such a local name and namespace URI exists. |
|
NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if there is no node with the specified
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this map is readonly. NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
setNamedItemnodeName
attribute. If a node with that name is already present in this map,
it is replaced by the new one. Replacing a node by itself has no
effect.nodeName attribute is used to derive the name
which the node must be stored under, multiple nodes of certain
types (those that have a "special" string value) cannot be stored
as the names would clash. This is seen as preferable to allowing
nodes to be aliased.
arg of type NodenodeName attribute.|
WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this map is readonly. INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR: Raised if HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR: Raised if an attempt is made to add a node doesn't belong in this NamedNodeMap. Examples would include trying to insert something other than an Attr node into an Element's map of attributes, or a non-Entity node into the DocumentType's map of Entities. |
setNamedItemNS introduced in DOM Level 2namespaceURI
and localName. If a node with that namespace URI and
that local name is already present in this map, it is replaced by
the new one. Replacing a node by itself has no effect.arg of type NodenamespaceURI and
localName attributes.|
WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this map is readonly. INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR: Raised if HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR: Raised if an attempt is made to add a node doesn't belong in this NamedNodeMap. Examples would include trying to insert something other than an Attr node into an Element's map of attributes, or a non-Entity node into the DocumentType's map of Entities. NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
The CharacterData interface extends Node with a set
of attributes and methods for accessing character data in the DOM.
For clarity this set is defined here rather than on each object
that uses these attributes and methods. No DOM objects correspond
directly to CharacterData, though Text and others do
inherit the interface from it. All offsets in this
interface start from 0.
As explained in the DOMString interface, text
strings in the DOM are represented in UTF-16, i.e. as a sequence of
16-bit units. In the following, the term 16-bit units is used
whenever necessary to indicate that indexing on CharacterData is
done in 16-bit units.
interface CharacterData : Node { attribute DOMString data; // raises(DOMException) on setting // raises(DOMException) on retrieval readonly attribute unsigned long length; DOMString substringData(in unsigned long offset, in unsigned long count) raises(DOMException); void appendData(in DOMString arg) raises(DOMException); void insertData(in unsigned long offset, in DOMString arg) raises(DOMException); void deleteData(in unsigned long offset, in unsigned long count) raises(DOMException); void replaceData(in unsigned long offset, in unsigned long count, in DOMString arg) raises(DOMException); };
data of type DOMStringCharacterData node.
However, implementation limits may mean that the entirety of a
node's data may not fit into a single DOMString. In such cases,
the user may call substringData to retrieve the data
in appropriately sized pieces.CharacterData is
a Text, or a CDATASection, this
attribute contains the property [character code] defined in [XML
Information set]. When the CharacterData
is a Comment,
this attribute contains the property [content] defined by the
Comment Information Item in [XML Information set].|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the node is readonly. |
|
DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR: Raised when it would return more characters
than fit in a |
length of type unsigned long,
readonlydata and the
substringData method below. This may have the value
zero, i.e., CharacterData nodes may be empty.appendDatadata provides access
to the concatenation of data and the DOMString specified.
|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
deleteDatadata and length
reflect the change.
offset of type
unsigned longcount of type
unsigned longoffset and count exceeds
length then all 16-bit units from offset
to the end of the data are deleted.|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
insertData|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
replaceDataoffset of type
unsigned longcount of type
unsigned longoffset and count exceeds
length, then all 16-bit units to the end of the data
are replaced; (i.e., the effect is the same as a
remove method call with the same range, followed by an
append method invocation).arg of type DOMStringDOMString with which the
range must be replaced.|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
substringDataoffset of type
unsigned longcount of type
unsigned long|
The specified substring. If the sum of |
|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified range of text does
not fit into a |
The Attr interface represents an attribute in an Element object.
Typically the allowable values for the attribute are defined in a
document type definition.
Attr objects inherit the Node interface, but
since they are not actually child nodes of the element they
describe, the DOM does not consider them part of the document tree.
Thus, the Node attributes
parentNode, previousSibling, and
nextSibling have a null value for
Attr objects. The DOM takes the view that attributes
are properties of elements rather than having a separate identity
from the elements they are associated with; this should make it
more efficient to implement such features as default attributes
associated with all elements of a given type. Furthermore,
Attr nodes may not be immediate children of a DocumentFragment. However,
they can be associated with Element nodes contained
within a DocumentFragment. In
short, users and implementors of the DOM need to be aware that
Attr nodes have some things in common with other
objects inheriting the Node interface, but they
also are quite distinct.
The attribute's effective value is determined as follows: if
this attribute has been explicitly assigned any value, that value
is the attribute's effective value; otherwise, if there is a
declaration for this attribute, and that declaration includes a
default value, then that default value is the attribute's effective
value; otherwise, the attribute does not exist on this element in
the structure model until it has been explicitly added. Note that
the nodeValue attribute on the Attr
instance can also be used to retrieve the string version of the
attribute's value(s).
In XML, where the value of an attribute can contain entity
references, the child nodes of the Attr node may be
either Text or
EntityReference
nodes (when these are in use; see the description of EntityReference for
discussion). Because the DOM Core is not aware of attribute types,
it treats all attribute values as simple strings, even if the DTD
or schema declares them as having tokenized types.
The DOM implementation does not perform any kind of
normalization. While it is expected that the value and
nodeValue attributes of an Attr node
would initially return a normalized value depending on the schema
in used, this may not be the case after mutation. This is true,
independently of whether the mutation is performed by setting the
string value directly or by changing the Attr child
nodes. In particular, this is true when character entity references
are involved, given that they are not represented in the DOM and
they impact attribute value normalization.
Note: The property [references] defined in [XML Information set] is not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core.
interface Attr : Node { readonly attribute DOMString name; readonly attribute boolean specified; attribute DOMString value; // raises(DOMException) on setting // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute Element ownerElement; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute TypeInfo schemaTypeInfo; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: boolean isId(); };
name of type DOMString, readonlyownerElement of type Element, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2Element
node this attribute is attached to or null if this
attribute is not in use.schemaTypeInfo of type TypeInfo, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 3specified of type boolean,
readonlyTrue if this attribute was explicitly given a
value in the instance document, false otherwise. If
the user changes the value of this attribute node (even if it ends
up having the same value as the default value) then this is set to
true. Removing attributes for which a default value is
defined in the DTD generates a new attribute with the default value
and this set to false. The implementation may handle
attributes with default values from other schemas similarly but
applications should use normalizeDocument() to
guarantee this information is up-to-date.value of type DOMStringgetAttribute on the
Element
interface.Text node with the
unparsed contents of the string. I.e. any characters that an XML
processor would recognize as markup are instead treated as literal
text. See also the method setAttribute on the Element interface.
Note: Some specialized implementations, such as some [SVG 1.0] implementations, may do normalization automatically, even after mutation; in such case, the value on retrieval may differ from the value on setting.
value may contain
the normalized attribute value and represents in that case the
property [normalized value] defined in [XML Information set].|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the node is readonly. |
isId introduced in DOM
Level 3ownerElement of this attribute can be retrieved using
Document.getElementById.
schemaTypeInfo?|
|
|
The Element interface represents an element in an HTML or XML
document. Elements may have attributes associated with them; since
the Element interface inherits from Node, the generic Node
interface attribute attributes may be used to retrieve
the set of all attributes for an element. There are methods on the
Element interface to retrieve either an Attr object by name or an
attribute value by name. In XML, where an attribute value may
contain entity references, an Attr object should be
retrieved to examine the possibly fairly complex sub-tree
representing the attribute value. On the other hand, in HTML, where
all attributes have simple string values, methods to directly
access an attribute value can safely be used as a convenience.
Note: In DOM Level 2, the method normalize
is inherited from the Node interface where it
was moved.
Note: The property [in-scope namespaces] defined in [XML Information set] are not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core. However, [DOM Level 3 XPath] does provide a way to access the property [in-scope namespaces].
interface Element : Node { readonly attribute DOMString tagName; DOMString getAttribute(in DOMString name); void setAttribute(in DOMString name, in DOMString value) raises(DOMException); void removeAttribute(in DOMString name) raises(DOMException); Attr getAttributeNode(in DOMString name); Attr setAttributeNode(in Attr newAttr) raises(DOMException); Attr removeAttributeNode(in Attr oldAttr) raises(DOMException); NodeList getElementsByTagName(in DOMString name); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: DOMString getAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: void setAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString qualifiedName, in DOMString value) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: void removeAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Attr getAttributeNodeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: Attr setAttributeNodeNS(in Attr newAttr) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: NodeList getElementsByTagNameNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: boolean hasAttribute(in DOMString name); // Introduced in DOM Level 2: boolean hasAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute TypeInfo schemaTypeInfo; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: void setIdAttribute(in DOMString name, in boolean isId) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: void setIdAttributeNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString localName, in boolean isId) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: void setIdAttributeNode(in Attr idAttr, in boolean isId) raises(DOMException); };
schemaTypeInfo of type TypeInfo, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 3tagName of type DOMString, readonly
<elementExample id="demo">
...
</elementExample> ,
tagName has the value "elementExample".
Note that this is case-preserving in XML, as are all of the
operations of the DOM. The HTML DOM returns the
tagName of an HTML element in the canonical uppercase
form, regardless of the case in the source HTML document.getAttributegetAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 2namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
getAttributeNodegetAttributeNodeNS method.
name of type DOMStringnodeName) of the attribute to
retrieve.getAttributeNodeNS introduced in DOM Level 2Attr node by local name
and namespace URI.namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
getElementsByTagNameNodeList of all descendant
Elements with a given tag name, in document order.
name of type DOMString|
A list of matching |
getElementsByTagNameNS introduced in DOM Level 2NodeList of all the descendant
Elements with a given local name and namespace URI in
document
order.
namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
hasAttribute introduced in DOM Level 2true when an attribute
with a given name is specified on this element or has a default
value, false otherwise.
name of type DOMString|
|
|
hasAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 2true when an attribute
with a given local name and namespace URI is specified on this
element or has a default value, false otherwise.namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
|
|
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
removeAttributeremoveAttributeNS method.
name of type DOMString|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
removeAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 2namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMString|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
removeAttributeNodeAttr node is defined in
the DTD, a new node immediately appears with the default value as
well as the corresponding namespace URI, local name, and prefix
when applicable. The implementation may handle default values from
other schemas similarly but applications should use
normalizeDocument() to guarantee this information is up-to-date.
|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if |
setAttributeAttr node plus any Text and EntityReference nodes,
build the appropriate subtree, and use
setAttributeNode to assign it as the value of an
attribute.setAttributeNS method.
|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified name contains an illegal character. NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
setAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 2qualifiedName, and its value is changed to be the
value parameter. This value is a simple string; it is
not parsed as it is being set. So any markup (such as syntax to be
recognized as an entity reference) is treated as literal text, and
needs to be appropriately escaped by the implementation when it is
written out. In order to assign an attribute value that contains
entity references, the user must create an Attr node plus any Text and EntityReference nodes,
build the appropriate subtree, and use
setAttributeNodeNS or setAttributeNode to
assign it as the value of an attribute.namespaceURI of type DOMStringqualifiedName of type DOMStringvalue of type DOMString|
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR: Raised if the specified qualified name contains an illegal character. NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NAMESPACE_ERR: Raised if the NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
setAttributeNodenodeName) is already present in the
element, it is replaced by the new one. Replacing an attribute node
by itself has no effect.setAttributeNodeNS method.
|
WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR: Raised if |
setAttributeNodeNS introduced in DOM Level 2|
If the |
|
WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR: Raised if NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR: Raised if NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: May be raised if the implementation does not support the feature "XML" and the language exposed through the Document does not support XML Namespaces (such as [HTML 4.01]). |
setIdAttribute introduced in DOM Level 3getElementById on Document. Note, however,
that this simply affects this node and does not change any grammar
that may be in use. Consequently, it may be reset according to the
grammar when the document is normalized.setIdAttributeNS method.
name of type DOMStringisId of type
boolean|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if the specified node is not an attribute of this element.
|
setIdAttributeNS introduced in DOM Level 3getElementById on Document. Note, however,
that this simply affects this node and does not change any grammar
that may be in use. Consequently, it may be reset according to the
grammar when the document is normalized.
namespaceURI of type DOMStringlocalName of type DOMStringisId of type
boolean|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if the specified node is not an attribute of this element.
|
setIdAttributeNode introduced in DOM Level 3getElementById on Document. Note, however,
that this simply affects this node and does not change any grammar
that may be in use. Consequently, it may be reset according to the
grammar when the document is normalized.
idAttr of type AttrisId of type
boolean|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised if the specified node is not an attribute of this element. |
The Text interface inherits from CharacterData and
represents the textual content (termed character
data in XML) of an Element or Attr. If there is no
markup inside an element's content, the text is contained in a
single object implementing the Text interface that is
the only child of the element. If there is markup, it is parsed
into the information
items (elements, comments, etc.) and Text
nodes that form the list of children of the element.
When a document is first made available via the DOM, there is
only one Text node for each block of text. Users may
create adjacent Text nodes that represent the contents
of a given element without any intervening markup, but should be
aware that there is no way to represent the separations between
these nodes in XML or HTML, so they will not (in general) persist
between DOM editing sessions. The normalize method on
Node merges any
such adjacent Text objects into a single node for each
block of text.
interface Text : CharacterData { Text splitText(in unsigned long offset) raises(DOMException); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: boolean isWhitespaceInElementContent(); // Introduced in DOM Level 3: readonly attribute DOMString wholeText; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: Text replaceWholeText(in DOMString content) raises(DOMException); };
wholeText of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 3Text nodes logically-adjacent
text nodes to this node, concatenated in document
order.isWhitespaceInElementContent
introduced in DOM Level 3|
|
Returns |
replaceWholeText introduced in
DOM Level 3EntityReference, the
EntityReference must be
removed instead of the read-only nodes. If any EntityReference to be
removed has descendants that are not EntityReference,
Text, or CDATASection nodes, the
replaceWholeText method must fail before performing
any modification of the document, raising a DOMException with the code
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR.
content of type DOMStringText node.|
The |
|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if one of the
|
splitTextoffset, keeping both in the tree as siblings. After being
split, this node will contain all the content up to the
offset point. A new node of the same type, which
contains all the content at and after the offset
point, is returned. If the original node had a parent node, the new
node is inserted as the next sibling of the original
node. When the offset is equal to the length of this
node, the new node has no data.
offset of type
unsigned long0.|
The new node, of the same type as this node. |
|
INDEX_SIZE_ERR: Raised if the specified offset is negative or
greater than the number of 16-bit units in NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised if this node is readonly. |
This interface inherits from CharacterData and
represents the content of a comment, i.e., all the characters
between the starting '<!--' and ending
'-->'. Note that this is the definition of a
comment in XML, and, in practice, HTML, although some HTML tools
may implement the full SGML comment structure.
interface Comment : CharacterData { };
The TypeInfo interface represent a type referenced
from Element or
Attr nodes,
specified in the schemas associated with the document. The type is
a pair of a namespace
URI and name properties, and depends on the document's
schema.
null on
typeName? for anonymous type? for undeclared
elements/attributes? Can schemaType be null?If the document's schema is an XML DTD [XML 1.0], the values are computed as follows:
Attr node,
typeNamespace is null and typeName represents the
[attribute type] property in the [XML Information set]. If there is no
declaration for the attribute, typeName is
null.
Element node, the
typeNamespace and typeName are
null.If the document's schema is an XML Schema [XML Schema Part 1], the values are computed as follows using the post-schema-validation infoset contributions (also called PSVI contributions):
null.
Note: At the time of writing, the XML Schema specification does not require exposing the declared type. Thus, DOM implementations might choose not to provide type information if validity is not valid.
Note: At the time of writing, the XML Schema
specification does not define how to expose anonymous types. If
future specifications define how to expose anonymous types, DOM
implementations can expose anonymous types via
typeName and typeNamespace
parameters.
Note: Other schema languages are outside the scope of the
W3C and therefore should define how to represent their type systems
using TypeInfo.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface TypeInfo { readonly attribute DOMString typeName; readonly attribute DOMString typeNamespace; };
typeName of type DOMString, readonlynull if unknown. Implementations may
also use null to represent XML Schema anonymous types.
typeNamespace of type DOMString,
readonlynull if the element does not have
declaration or if no namespace information is available.
Implementations may also use null to represent XML
Schema anonymous types.
When associating an object to a key on a node using
setUserData the application can provide a handler that
gets called when the node the object is associated to is being
cloned, imported, or renamed. This can be used by the application
to implement various behaviors regarding the data it associates to
the DOM nodes. This interface defines that handler.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface UserDataHandler { // OperationType const unsigned short NODE_CLONED = 1; const unsigned short NODE_IMPORTED = 2; const unsigned short NODE_DELETED = 3; const unsigned short NODE_RENAMED = 4; void handle(in unsigned short operation, in DOMString key, in DOMObject data, in Node src, in Node dst); };
An integer indicating the type of operation being performed on a node.
NODE_CLONEDNODE_DELETEDNote: This may not be supported or may not be reliable in certain environments, such as Java, where the implementation has no real control over when objects are actually deleted.
NODE_IMPORTEDNODE_RENAMEDhandleoperation of type
unsigned shortkey of type DOMStringdata of type DOMObjectsrc of type Nodenull when the node is being deleted.dst of type Nodenull.DOMError is an interface that describes an
error.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMError { // ErrorSeverity const unsigned short SEVERITY_WARNING = 0; const unsigned short SEVERITY_ERROR = 1; const unsigned short SEVERITY_FATAL_ERROR = 2; readonly attribute unsigned short severity; readonly attribute DOMString message; readonly attribute DOMString type; readonly attribute Object relatedException; readonly attribute DOMObject relatedData; readonly attribute DOMLocator location; };
An integer indicating the severity of the error.
SEVERITY_ERRORDOMError is errorSEVERITY_FATAL_ERRORDOMError is fatal errorSEVERITY_WARNINGDOMError is warninglocation of type DOMLocator,
readonlymessage of type DOMString, readonlyrelatedData of type DOMObject,
readonlyDOMError.type
dependent data if any.relatedException of
type Object, readonlyseverity of type
unsigned short, readonlySEVERITY_WARNING, SEVERITY_ERROR, or
SEVERITY_FATAL_ERROR.type of type DOMString, readonlyDOMString
indicating which related data is expected in
relatedData. Users should refer to the specification
of the error in order to find its DOMString type and
relatedData definitions if any.
Note: As an example, [DOM Level 3 Load and Save] does not
keep the [baseURI] property defined on a Processing Instruction
information item. Therefore, the DOMBuilder generates
a SEVERITY_WARNING with type
"infoset-baseURI" and the lost [baseURI] property
represented as a DOMString in the
relatedData attribute.
DOMErrorHandler is a callback interface that the
DOM implementation can call when reporting errors that happens
while processing XML data, or when doing some other processing
(e.g. validating a document).
The application that is using the DOM implementation is expected to implement this interface.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMErrorHandler { boolean handleError(in DOMError error); };
handleErrorerror of type DOMError|
|
If the handleError method returns |
DOMLocator is an interface that describes a
location (e.g. where an error occured).
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMLocator { readonly attribute long lineNumber; readonly attribute long columnNumber; readonly attribute long offset; readonly attribute Node relatedNode; readonly attribute DOMString uri; };
columnNumber of type
long, readonly-1 if there is no column number available.lineNumber of type
long, readonly-1
if there is no column number available.offset of type long,
readonly-1 if there is no offset available.relatedNode of type Node, readonlynull if
no node is available.uri of type DOMString, readonlynull if no
URI is available.The DOMConfiguration interface represents the
configuration of a document and maintains a table of recognized
parameters. Using the configuration, it is possible to change Document.normalizeDocument
behavior, such as replacing the CDATASection nodes with
Text nodes or
specifying the type of the schema that must be used when the
validation of the Document is requested.
DOMConfiguration objects are also used in [DOM Level 3 Load
and Save] in the DOMBuilder and
DOMWriter interfaces.
The DOMConfiguration distinguish two types of
parameters: boolean (boolean parameters) and DOMUserData (parameters).
The names used by the DOMConfiguration object are
defined throughout the DOM Level 3 specifications. Names are
case-insensitives. To avoid possible conflicts, as a convention,
names referring to boolean parameters and parameters defined
outside the DOM specification should be made unique. Names are
recommended to follow the XML name production rule
but it is not enforced by the DOM implementation. DOM Level 3 Core
Implementations are required to recognize all boolean parameters
and parameters defined in this specification. Each boolean
parameter state or parameter value may then be supported or not by
the implementation. Refer to their definition to know if a state or
a value must be supported or not.
Note: Parameters are similar to features and properties used in SAX2 [SAX].
setBooleanParameter("error-handler", true)?The following list of parameters defined in the DOM:
"error-handler"DOMErrorHandler
object. If an error is encountered in the document, the
implementation will call back the DOMErrorHandler
registered using this parameter.DOMError.relatedData
will contain the closest node to where the error occured. If the
implementation is unable to determine the node where the error
occurs, DOMError.relatedData
will contain the Document node. Mutations to
the document from within an error handler will result in
implementation dependent behaviour.
"schema-type"DOMString object
containing an absolute URI and representing the type of the schema
language used to validate a document against. Note that no lexical
checking is done on the absolute URI.Note: For XML Schema [XML Schema Part 1], applications
must use the value "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema".
For XML DTD [XML 1.0], applications must use the value
"http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml". Other schema languages
are outside the scope of the W3C and therefore should recommend an
absolute URI in order to use this method.
"schema-location"DOMString object
containing a list of URIs, separated by white spaces (characters
matching the nonterminal
production S defined in section 2.3 [XML 1.0]), that
represents the schemas against which validation should occur. The
types of schemas referenced in this list must match the type
specified with schema-type, otherwise the behaviour of
an implementation is undefined. If the schema type is XML Schema
[XML
Schema Part 1], only one of the XML Schemas in the list can be
with no namespace.schemaLocation attribute in the
instance document or on the import element will be
effectively ignored).
Note: It is illegal to set the schema-location parameter
if the schema-type parameter value is not set. It is strongly
recommended that DOMInputSource.baseURI will be set,
so that an implementation can successfully resolve any external
entities referenced.
The following list of boolean parameters (features) defined in the DOM:
"canonical-form"truefalse"cdata-sections"trueCDATASection
nodes in the document.
falseCDATASection nodes in the
document into Text nodes. The new Text
node is then combined with any adjacent Text node."comments""datatype-normalization"truefalse"discard-default-content"truespecified flag on Attr nodes, and so on) to
decide what attributes and content should be discarded or not. Note
that the specified flag on Attr nodes in itself is
not always reliable, it is only reliable when it is set to
false since the only case where it can be set to
false is if the attribute was created by the
implementation. The default content won't be removed if an
implementation does not have any information available.
false"entities"trueEntityReference and Entity nodes in the
document.
falseEntityReference and Entity nodes from the
document, putting the entity expansions directly in their place. Text nodes are into
"normal" form. Only EntityReference nodes to
non-defined entities are kept in the document."infoset"truefalse:
namespace-declarations,
validate-if-schema, entities,
datatype-normalization,
cdata-sections.true:
whitespace-in-element-content, comments,
namespaces.getFeature
returns true only if the individual features specified
above are appropriately set.
falseinfoset to false has no
effect.
"namespaces"truefalse"namespace-declarations"truefalsefalse."normalize-characters"truefalse"split-cdata-sections"truefalseCDATASection contains an
unrepresentable character."validate"truedatatype-normalization is
true.
Note: validate-if-schema and
validate are mutually exclusive, setting one of them
to true will set the other one to
false.
falsevalidate-if-schema is
true."validate-if-schema"truedatatype-normalization is
true.
Note: validate-if-schema and
validate are mutually exclusive, setting one of them
to true will set the other one to
false.
falsevalidate is
true."whitespace-in-element-content"true"validate" and
Text.isWhitespaceInElementContent.falseisWhitespaceInElementContent flag on Text nodes to determine
if a text node should be written out or not.The resolutions of entities is done using
Document.baseURI. However, when the features "LS-Load"
or "LS-Save" defined in [DOM Level 3 Load and Save] are
supported by the DOM implementation, the parameter
"entity-resolver" can also be used on
DOMConfiguration objects attached to Document nodes. If this
parameter is set, Document.normalizeDocument
will invoke the entity resolver instead of using
Document.baseURI.
// Introduced in DOM Level 3: interface DOMConfiguration { void setParameter(in DOMString name, in DOMUserData value) raises(DOMException); DOMUserData getParameter(in DOMString name) raises(DOMException); boolean canSetParameter(in DOMString name, in DOMUserData value); };
canSetParametername of type DOMStringvalue of type DOMUserDatanull, the returned value is
true.|
|
|
getParametername of type DOMString|
The current object associated with the specified parameter or
|
|
NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised when the parameter name is not recognized. |
setParametername of type DOMStringvalue of type DOMUserDatanull if the user wishes to unset
the parameter. While the type of the value parameter is defined as
DOMUserData, the object
type must match the type defined by the definition of the
parameter. For example, if the parameter is
"error-handler", the value must be of type DOMErrorHandler.
|
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR: Raised when the parameter name is recognized but the requested value cannot be set. NOT_FOUND_ERR: Raised when the parameter name is not recognized. |
The interfaces defined here form part of the DOM Core specification, but objects that expose these interfaces will never be encountered in a DOM implementation that deals only with HTML.
The interfaces found within this section are not mandatory. A
DOM application may use the hasFeature(feature,
version) method of the DOMImplementation
interface with parameter values "XML" and "3.0" (respectively) to
determine whether or not this module is supported by the
implementation. In order to fully support this module, an
implementation must also support the "Core" feature defined in Fundamental Interfaces. Please
refer to additional information about Conformance in this
specification. The DOM Level 3 XML module is backward compatible
with the DOM Level 2 XML [DOM Level 2 Core] and DOM Level 1
XML [DOM Level 1] modules, i.e. a DOM
Level 3 XML implementation who returns true for "XML"
with the version number "3.0" must also
return true for this feature when the
version number is "2.0",
"1.0", "" or, null.
CDATA sections are used to escape blocks of text containing characters that would otherwise be regarded as markup. The only delimiter that is recognized in a CDATA section is the "]]>" string that ends the CDATA section. CDATA sections cannot be nested. Their primary purpose is for including material such as XML fragments, without needing to escape all the delimiters.
The DOMString
attribute of the Text node holds the text
that is contained by the CDATA section. Note that this may
contain characters that need to be escaped outside of CDATA
sections and that, depending on the character encoding ("charset")
chosen for serialization, it may be impossible to write out some
characters as part of a CDATA section.
The CDATASection interface inherits from the CharacterData
interface through the Text interface. Adjacent
CDATASection nodes are not merged by use of the
normalize method of the Node interface.
Note: Because no markup is recognized within a
CDATASection, character numeric references cannot be
used as an escape mechanism when serializing. Therefore, action
needs to be taken when serializing a CDATASection with
a character encoding where some of the contained characters cannot
be represented. Failure to do so would not produce well-formed
XML.
One potential solution in the serialization process is to end the
CDATA section before the character, output the character using a
character reference or entity reference, and open a new CDATA
section for any further characters in the text node. Note, however,
that some code conversion libraries at the time of writing do not
return an error or exception when a character is missing from the
encoding, making the task of ensuring that data is not corrupted on
serialization more difficult.
interface CDATASection : Text { };
Each Document
has a doctype attribute whose value is either
null or a DocumentType object. The
DocumentType interface in the DOM Core provides an
interface to the list of entities that are defined for the
document, and little else because the effect of namespaces and the
various XML schema efforts on DTD representation are not clearly
understood as of this writing.
The DOM Level 2 doesn't support editing
DocumentType nodes. DocumentType nodes
are read-only.
Note: The property [children] defined by the Document Type Declaration Information Item in [XML Information set] is not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core.
interface DocumentType : Node { readonly attribute DOMString name; readonly attribute NamedNodeMap entities; readonly attribute NamedNodeMap notations; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute DOMString publicId; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute DOMString systemId; // Introduced in DOM Level 2: readonly attribute DOMString internalSubset; };
entities of type NamedNodeMap,
readonlyNamedNodeMap containing
the general entities, both external and internal, declared in the
DTD. Parameter entities are not contained. Duplicates are
discarded. For example in:
<!DOCTYPE ex SYSTEM "ex.dtd" [ <!ENTITY foo "foo"> <!ENTITY bar "bar"> <!ENTITY bar "bar2"> <!ENTITY % baz "baz"> ]> <ex/>
foo and the first
declaration of bar but not the second declaration of
bar or baz. Every node in this map also
implements the Entity interface.entities cannot be altered in any way.internalSubset of type
DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2null if there
is none. This is does not contain the delimiting square brackets.
Note: The actual content returned depends on how much information is available to the implementation. This may vary depending on various parameters, including the XML processor used to build the document.
name of type DOMString, readonlyDOCTYPE keyword.notations of type NamedNodeMap,
readonlyNamedNodeMap containing
the notations declared in the DTD. Duplicates are discarded. Every
node in this map also implements the Notation interface.notations cannot be altered in any way.publicId of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2systemId of type DOMString, readonly,
introduced in DOM Level 2This interface represents a notation declared in the DTD. A
notation either declares, by name, the format of an unparsed entity
(see section
4.7 of the XML 1.0 specification [XML 1.0]), or is
used for formal declaration of processing instruction targets (see
section
2.6 of the XML 1.0 specification [XML 1.0]). The
nodeName attribute inherited from Node is set to the
declared name of the notation.
The DOM Core does not support editing Notation
nodes; they are therefore readonly.
A Notation node does not have any parent.
DocumentType. 2- what
would be the key for notations in namednodemap?interface Notation : Node { readonly attribute DOMString publicId; readonly attribute DOMString systemId; };
publicId of type DOMString, readonlynull.systemId of type DOMString, readonlynull. This may
be an absolute URI or not.This interface represents a known entity, either parsed or unparsed, in an XML document. Note that this models the entity itself not the entity declaration.
The nodeName attribute that is inherited from Node contains the
name of the entity.
An XML processor may choose to completely expand entities before
the structure model is passed to the DOM; in this case there will
be no EntityReference nodes in
the document tree.
XML does not mandate that a non-validating XML processor read
and process entity declarations made in the external subset or
declared in external parameter entities. This means that parsed
entities declared in the external subset need not be expanded by
some classes of applications, and that the replacement text of the
entity may not be available. When the
replacement text is available, the corresponding
Entity node's child list represents the structure of
that replacement value. Otherwise, the child list is empty.
The DOM Level 2 does not support editing Entity
nodes; if a user wants to make changes to the contents of an
Entity, every related EntityReference node has
to be replaced in the structure model by a clone of the
Entity's contents, and then the desired changes must
be made to each of those clones instead. Entity nodes
and all their descendants are readonly.
An Entity node does not have any parent.
Note: If the entity contains an unbound namespace prefix,
the namespaceURI of the corresponding node in the
Entity node subtree is null. The same is
true for EntityReference nodes that
refer to this entity, when they are created using the
createEntityReference method of the Document interface. The DOM
Level 2 does not support any mechanism to resolve namespace
prefixes.
Note: The properties [notation name] and [notation] defined in [XML Information set] are not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core.
interface Entity : Node { readonly attribute DOMString publicId; readonly attribute DOMString systemId; readonly attribute DOMString notationName; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString actualEncoding; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString encoding; // Introduced in DOM Level 3: attribute DOMString version; };
actualEncoding of type DOMString, introduced
in DOM Level 3null
otherwise.encoding of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 3null otherwise.notationName of type DOMString, readonlynull.publicId of type DOMString, readonlynull otherwise.systemId of type DOMString, readonlynull otherwise. This may be an absolute URI or
not.version of type DOMString, introduced in DOM Level 3null otherwise.EntityReference nodes may be used to represent an
entity reference in the tree. Note that character references and
references to predefined entities are considered to be expanded by
the HTML or XML processor so that characters are represented by
their Unicode equivalent rather than by an entity reference.
Moreover, the XML processor may completely expand references to
entities while building the Document, instead of
providing EntityReference nodes. If it does provide
such nodes, then for an EntityReference node that
represents a reference to a known entity an Entity exists, and the
subtree of the EntityReference node is a copy of the
Entity node subtree.
However, the latter may not be true when an entity contains an
unbound namespace
prefix. In such a case, because the namespace prefix
resolution depends on where the entity reference is, the descendants of the
EntityReference node may be bound to different namespace URIs.
When an EntityReference node represents a reference to
an unknown entity, its content is empty.
As for Entity
nodes, EntityReference nodes and all their descendants are readonly.
Note: The properties [system identifier] and [public
identifier] defined by the Unexpanded Entity Reference Information
Item in [XML Information set] are accessible
through the Entity
interface. The property [all declarations processed] is not
accessible through the DOM API.
Note: EntityReference nodes may cause
element content and attribute value normalization problems when,
such as in XML 1.0 and XML Schema, the normalization is be
performed after entity reference are expanded.
interface EntityReference : Node { };
The ProcessingInstruction interface represents a
"processing instruction", used in XML as a way to keep
processor-specific information in the text of the document.
Note: The property [notation] defined in [XML Information set] is not accessible from DOM Level 3 Core.
interface ProcessingInstruction : Node { readonly attribute DOMString target; attribute DOMString data; // raises(DOMException) on setting };
data of type DOMString?>.|
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR: Raised when the node is readonly. |
target of type DOMString, readonly