dom-iterator
Feature-rich, well-tested Iterator for traversing DOM nodes. A better version of NodeIterator. Travels in both directions.
Can be used in node.js with mini-html-parser.
Installation
Install with component(1):
$ component install matthewmueller/dom-iterator
With node.js:
$ npm install dom-iterator
Example
var it = iterator(node);
var next;
while (next = it.next(Node.TEXT_NODE)) {
console.log(next.nodeValue) // next textnodes after node
}
API
iterator(node, root)
Initialize an iterator starting on the node
. Optionally you can specify a root
to limit your traversal to a particular subtree. root
must be either a parent or an ancestor of node
.
var it = iterator(el.firstChild, el)
iterator#next([expr], [n])
Gets the next DOM node
. If no node
exists, return null
. You may pass an expression expr
, to grab the first node that matches expr
.
Additionally, you can pass a number to select the nth
node. Defaults to 1
or the 1st
node.
var node = it.next()
// select the 2nd element node we come across
var next = it.next(Node.ELEMENT_NODE, 2)
Here's a look at how the DOM is traversed:
iterator#prev()
, iterator#previous()
Gets the previous DOM node
. If no node
exists, return null
. You may pass an expression expr
, to grab the first node that matches expr
.
Additionally, you can pass a number to select the nth
node. Defaults to 1
or the 1st
node.
var node = it.prev()
// select the 2nd element node we come across
var prev = it.prev(Node.ELEMENT_NODE, 2)
Here's a look at how the DOM is traversed:
iterator.select(expr)
iterate over nodes that pass the expression expr
. The expr
can be an enum, number, string or function. If it's a number, the nodeType
is compared.
This function can be chained where all expressions are OR-ed.
it.select(Node.ELEMENT_NODE)
.select(8)
.select('nodeValue == "sloth"')
.select(fn)
This is saying:
select all element nodes or comment nodes or nodes with the nodeValue "sloth" or nodes that pass the function
fn
.
iterator.reject(expr)
iterate over nodes that do not pass the expression expr
. The expr
can be an enum, number, string or function. If it's a number, the nodeType
is compared.
This function can be chained where all expressions are AND-ed.
it.reject(Node.ELEMENT_NODE)
.reject(8)
.reject('nodeValue == "sloth"')
.reject(fn)
This is saying:
reject all element nodes and comment nodes and nodes with the nodeValue sloth and nodes that pass the function
fn
".
iterator.revisit(revisit)
You can also skip over elements you already visited, by setting revisit
to false. By default, revisit
is set to true
.
it.revisit(false);
Here's how that would change the iterator:
it.next():
it.prev()
iterator.opening()
Jump to the opening tag of an element. This is the default.
var dom = domify('<em>hi</em>');
var it = it(dom).opening()
it.next() // 'hi'
iterator.closing()
Jump to the closing tag of an element
var dom = domify('<em>hi</em>');
var it = it(dom).closing()
it.prev() // 'hi'
iterator.peek([expr], [n])
Sometimes you want to peek on the following or previous node without actually visiting it. With peek
you can peek forward or backwards n
steps. If no n
is given, peek forward 1 step.
Peaking forward:
it.peek(); // peek forward 1
it.peek(3); // peek forward 3 steps
Peaking backwards:
it.peek(Node.ELEMENT_NODE, -3) // peek backwards 3 steps, only selecting element nodes
iterator.reset([newNode])
Reset the iterator to the original node
. Optionally pass a newNode
to start at.
it.reset();
iterator.use(fn)
Add a plugin to the iterator.
Run Tests
On the server:
npm install
make test
Or in the browser:
npm install
make test-browser
License
MIT