Using querySelector with IDs that are numbers

I needed an approach which was automated. A recent change meant the id values used were no longer simple alphabetic characters and included numbers and special characters.

I ended up using CSS.escape: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CSS/escape

console.log(CSS.escape('1'));

First, this is the failing case:

const theId = "1";
document.querySelector(`#${theId}`);
const el = document.querySelector(`#${theId}`);
el.innerHTML = "After";
<div id="1">Before</div>

And now using CSS.escape:

const theId = "1";
const el = document.querySelector(`#${CSS.escape(theId)}`);
el.innerHTML = "After";
<div id="1">Before</div>

See how it correctly changes to show After, demonstrating the selector worked!


Because while they are valid in the HTML5 spec, they are not valid in CSS, which is what "query selector" means.

Instead, you would have to do this: document.querySelector("[id='1']"), which is very long-winded considering you could give it a meaningful ID like message1 or something ;)


Here is a function I made just now for dealing with leading number ID's in CSS selectors, and it is IE safe as CSS.escape is not.

Pass the selector through this cleanSelector function before using it :

var cleanSelector = function(selector){
    (selector.match(/(#[0-9][^\s:,]*)/g) || []).forEach(function(n){
        selector = selector.replace(n, '[id="' + n.replace("#", "") + '"]');
    });
    return selector;
};

var myselector = ".dog #980sada_as div span#aside:hover div.apple#05crab:nth-of-type(2), .ginger #2_green_div, div.cupcake #darwin p#23434-346365-53453";

var clean_myselector = cleanSelector(myselector);

// print to show difference
console.log(myselector);
console.log(clean_myselector);

//use the new selector like normal
var elems = document.querySelectorAll( clean_myselector ); 



It is valid, but requires some special handling. From here: http://mathiasbynens.be/notes/css-escapes

Leading digits

If the first character of an identifier is numeric, you’ll need to escape it based on its Unicode code point. For example, the code point for the character 1 is U+0031, so you would escape it as \000031 or \31 .

Basically, to escape any numeric character, just prefix it with \3 and append a space character ( ). Yay Unicode!

So your code would end up as (CSS first, JS second):

#\31  {
    background: hotpink;
}

document.getElementById('1');
document.querySelector('#\\31 ');