Question

Cross Platform if possible, how can I select classes in Javascript (but not Jquery please -MooTools is fine though-) on code that I can't add an ID? Specifically, I want to add the class "cf" on any li below:

HTML

<div class="itemRelated">
  <ul>
<li class="even">
<li class="odd">
<li class="even">

I tried to fiddle it but something is missing:

Javascript

 var list, i;
list = document.getElementsByClassName("even, odd");
for (i = 0; i < list.length; ++i) {
    list[index].setAttribute('class', 'cf');
}

JSFiddle

ps. This question phenomenally has possible duplicates, (another one) but none of the answers makes it clear.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Using plain javascript:

var list;
list = document.querySelectorAll("li.even, li.odd");
for (var i = 0; i < list.length; ++i) {
   list[i].classList.add('cf');
}

Demo

For older browsers you could use this:

var list = [];
var elements = document.getElementsByTagName('li');
for (var i = 0; i < elements.length; ++i) {
    if (elements[i].className == "even" || elements[i].className == "odd") {
        list.push(elements[i]);
    };
}
for (var i = 0; i < list.length; ++i) {
    if (list[i].className.split(' ').indexOf('cf') < 0) {
        list[i].className = list[i].className + ' cf';
    }
}

Demo


Using Mootools:

$$('.itemRelated li').addClass('cf');

Demo

or if you want to target specific by Class:

$$('li.even, li.odd').addClass('cf');

Demo

OTHER TIPS

I know this is old, but is there any reason not to simply do this (besides potential browser support issues)?

document.querySelectorAll("li.even, li.odd").forEach((el) => {
    el.classList.add('cf');
});

Support: https://caniuse.com/#feat=es5

Using some newer browser objects and methods.

Pure JS: Details: old fashioned way, declaring stuff at the beginging than iterating in one big loop over elements with index 'i', no big science here. One thing is using classList object which is a smart way to add/remove/check classes inside arrays.

var elements = document.querySelectorAll('.even','.odd'),
    i, length;

for(i = 0, length = elements.length; i < length; i++) {
    elements[i].classList.add('cf');
}

Pure JS - 2: Details: document.querySelectorAll returns an array-like object which can be accessed via indexes but has no Array methods. Calling slice from Array.prototype returns an array of fetched elements instantly (probably the fastest NodeList -> Array conversion). Than you can use a .forEach method on newly created array object.

Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('.even','.odd'))
 .forEach(function(element) {
    element.classList.add('cf');
});

Pure JS - 3: Details: this is quite similar to v2, [].map is roughly that same as Array.prototype.map except here you declare an empty array to call the map method. It's shorter but more (ok little more) memory consuming. .map method runs a function on every element from the array and returns a new array (adding return in inside function would cause filling the returned values, here it's unused).

[].map.call(document.querySelectorAll('.even','.odd'), function(element) {
    element.classList.add('cf');
});

Pick one and use ;)

querySelectorAll is supported in IE8, getElementsByClassName is not, which does not get two classes at the same time either. None of them work in iE7, but who cares.

Then it's just a matter of iterating and adding to the className property.

var list = document.querySelectorAll(".even, .odd");
for (var i = list.length; i--;) {
    list[i].className = list[i].className + ' cf';
}

FIDDLE

As others mention for selecting the elements you should use .querySelectorAll() method. DOM also provides classList API which supports adding, removing and toggling classes:

var list, i;
list = document.querySelectorAll('.even, .foo');
for (i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
    list[i].classList.add('cf');
}

As always IE9 and bellow don't support the API, if you want to support those browsers you can use a shim, MDN has one.

If you want to select elements with different classes all together then the best choice is querySelectorAll.

querySelectorAll uses CSS selectors to select elements. As we add the same CSS properties to different elements by separating them by a comma in the same way we can select those elements using this.

.even, .odd {
    font-weight: bold;
}

Both elements with class 'even' and 'odd' get bold.

let list = document.querySelectorAll('.even, .odd');

Now, both the elements are selected.

+Point: you should use classList.add() method to add class.

Here is the complete code for you.

let list = document.querySelectorAll('.even, .odd');

for (i = 0; i < list.length; ++i) {
    list.classList.add('cf');
}
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