Getting element by a custom attribute using JavaScript

If you're using jQuery, you can use some of their selector magic to do something like this:

    $('div[tokenid=14]')

as your selector.


It is not good to use custom attributes in the HTML. If any, you should use HTML5's data attributes.

Nevertheless you can write your own function that traverses the tree, but that will be quite slow compared to getElementById because you cannot make use of any index:

function getElementByAttribute(attr, value, root) {
    root = root || document.body;
    if(root.hasAttribute(attr) && root.getAttribute(attr) == value) {
        return root;
    }
    var children = root.children, 
        element;
    for(var i = children.length; i--; ) {
        element = getElementByAttribute(attr, value, children[i]);
        if(element) {
            return element;
        }
    }
    return null;
}

In the worst case, this will traverse the whole tree. Think about how to change your concept so that you can make use browser functions as much as possible.

In newer browsers you use of the querySelector method, where it would just be:

var element = document.querySelector('[tokenid="14"]');

This will be much faster too.


Update: Please note @Andy E's comment below. It might be that you run into problems with IE (as always ;)). If you do a lot of element retrieval of this kind, you really should consider using a JavaScript library such as jQuery, as the others mentioned. It hides all these browser differences.


<div data-automation="something">
</div>

document.querySelector("div[data-automation]")

=> finds the div

document.querySelector("div[data-automation='something']")

=> finds the div with a value