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/* | |
* Minimal classList shim for IE 9 | |
* By Devon Govett | |
* MIT LICENSE | |
*/ | |
if (!("classList" in document.documentElement) && Object.defineProperty && typeof HTMLElement !== 'undefined') { | |
Object.defineProperty(HTMLElement.prototype, 'classList', { | |
get: function() { | |
var self = this; | |
function update(fn) { | |
return function(value) { | |
var classes = self.className.split(/\s+/), | |
index = classes.indexOf(value); | |
fn(classes, index, value); | |
self.className = classes.join(" "); | |
} | |
} | |
var ret = { | |
add: update(function(classes, index, value) { | |
~index || classes.push(value); | |
}), | |
remove: update(function(classes, index) { | |
~index && classes.splice(index, 1); | |
}), | |
toggle: update(function(classes, index, value) { | |
~index ? classes.splice(index, 1) : classes.push(value); | |
}), | |
contains: function(value) { | |
return !!~self.className.split(/\s+/).indexOf(value); | |
}, | |
item: function(i) { | |
return self.className.split(/\s+/)[i] || null; | |
} | |
}; | |
Object.defineProperty(ret, 'length', { | |
get: function() { | |
return self.className.split(/\s+/).length; | |
} | |
}); | |
return ret; | |
} | |
}); | |
} |
@devongovett Look to how some of the selector engines like Sizzle or NWMatcher detect class names. They have refined them for speed, at first glance yur class name operations look a little costly. Also extending the DOM leads to nothing but headache and dev tears.
That's exactly what it is supposed to be though - a polyfill. And I agree it can probably be improved but it was designed to be really small and I wrote it in about 5 minutes. :) If you've got improvements, by all means have at it.
@devongovett Polyfill or not, extending the DOM has been known to cause problems. Would be better if you made a small utility method that leveraged native functionality or forked for a fallback.
If you don't want to extend the DOM, don't use this shim. What problems do you see? It seems to work for me...
@devongovett I'm trying to save you some heart burn by giving you a heads up. I've spent many years working with libs like Prototype that extend the DOM and a lot of the time things seemed to work fine, for a time, but then fell apart down the road.
I added (half-assed) support for length
https://gist.github.com/1383813
I understand support was aimed at IE8/9 but this causes script errors in IE 6/7 and 8.
IE 8 has window.Element but not window.HTMLElement.
It doesn't have Object.defineProperty either... better?
@rwldrn wouldn't length be better implemented as a getter? Otherwise if the user updates the className the length won't change.
@devongovett IE8 has Object.defineProperty
. In fact, IE8's Object.defineProperty only works on DOM elements ;D
Yeah I realize that. I was referring to IE 6 and 7. Unfortunately the length getter wouldn't work in IE 8 either.
@devongovett In IE8 HTMLElement
will be an undefined var reference and throw an error.
Also another heads up, String#split
and IE are iffy when it comes to regexp support (rule of thumb: keep it really simple and test).
Your regexp could be simplified to just /\s+/
.
@devongovett - it sure would, but like I said it's "half-assed" and only meant to work in IE8 right?
Eh! Screw IE < 9. Too many problems and I wasn't trying to support it in my app anyway. The regex is now simplified, and I added "real" length support via a getter. And to answer your question @rwldrn, it looks like IE does not have DOMTokenList.
Word.
Super late to this party, but my classList polyfill has true native .length
by being an array (i.e. constructor's .prototype = []
). You could try something like that.
I wonder if those browsers that are missing
classList
support would haveDOMTokenList
support, which would be the base proto ofclassList
...