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Classes that make up DOM
Here is a list of all classes that make up DOM in alphabetical order with some basic usage examples:
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AttrRepresents an attribute on an Element object. -
CharacterDataRepresents a Node object that contains characters. -
ChildNode(Trait) Contains methods that are particular to Node objects that can have a parent. -
CommentRepresents textual notations within markup. -
DocumentRepresents any web page loaded in the browser and serves as an entry point into the web page's content. -
DocumentFragmentRepresents a minimal document object that has no parent. -
DocumentTypeRepresents a Node containing a doctype. -
ElementThe most general base class from which all objects in a Document inherit. -
HTMLCollectionRepresents a Node list that can only contain Element nodes. -
HTMLDocumentProvides access to special properties and methods not present by default on a regular (XML) document. -
LiveProperty(Trait) Internal trait used to allow getting and setting of properties representing live data structures. -
NodeA Node is an interface from which a number of DOM types inherit. -
NonDocumentTypeChildNode(Trait) Contains methods that are particular to Node objects that can have a parent but not suitable for DocumentType. -
ParentNode(Trait) Contains methods that are particular to Node objects that can have children. -
TextRepresents the textual content of Element or Attr. -
TokenListRepresents a set of space-separated tokens. -
XMLDocumentProvides access to special properties and methods not present by default on a regular document.
This type represents a DOM element's attribute as an object. In most DOM methods, you will probably directly get or set an element's attribute as a string (e.g., Element.getAttribute().
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name(string) (Readonly) The attributes name. -
prefix(?string) (Readonly) The namespace prefix of the attribute, or null if no prefix is specified. -
ownerElement(Element) (Readonly) The element that the Attr is attached to. -
value(string) The attribute's value.
<!doctype html>
<ul id="shop-items">
<li id="arduino">Arduino</li>
<li id="raspberry-pi" class="special-offer special-offer-two-for-one">Raspberry Pi</li>
<li id="class">PIC</li>
</ul>$arduinoElement = $document->getElementById("arduino");
$raspberryPiElement = $document->getElementById("raspberry-pi");
// Reference the attribute, remove it from its current parent, reattach it to new parent.
$attribute = $raspberryPiElement->getAttributeNode("class");
$raspberryPiElement->removeAttributeNode($attribute);
$arduinoElement->setAttributeNode($attribute);Jump to the CharacterData source code
Read CharacterData specification
The CharacterData type represents a Node that contains a string of characters. This is an abstract type, implemented by Text and Comment (see below).
The ChildNode trait contains methods that are particular to Node objects that have a parent. The trait is used by the following classes:
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remove() : voidRemoves this ChildNode from the children list of its parent -
before(DOMNode $node) : voidInserts another Node into the children list of this ChildNode's parent, just before this ChildNode -
after(DOMNode $node) : voidInserts another Node into the children list of this ChildNode's parent, just after this ChildNode -
replaceWith(DOMNode $replacement) : voidReplace this ChildNode in the children list of its parent with the supplied replacement node
<!doctype html>
<form method="post">
<button id="buttonA" name="order" value="A">A</button>
<button id="buttonB" name="order" value="B">B</button>
<button id="buttonC" name="order" value="C">C</button>
</form>// If a button has been clicked, its value will be in the POST `order` key
if(isset($_POST["order"])) {
// Reference the form and its first button:
$form = $document->forms[0];
$firstButton = $form->firstEElementChild;
// Reference the clicked button, then replace the first button with it.
$clickedButton = $form->querySelector("[value='" . $_POST["order"] . "']");
if($firstButton !== $clickedButton) {
$firstButton->before($clickedButton);
}
}// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
// TODO.
PHP.GT/Dom is a separately maintained component of PHP.GT/WebEngine.