Element: setAttribute() method

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.

The setAttribute() method of the Element interface sets the value of an attribute on the specified element. If the attribute already exists, the value is updated; otherwise a new attribute is added with the specified name and value.

To get the current value of an attribute, use getAttribute(); to remove an attribute, call removeAttribute().

If you need to work with the Attr node (such as cloning from another element) before adding it, you can use the setAttributeNode() method instead.

Syntax

js
setAttribute(name, value)

Parameters

name

A string specifying the name of the attribute whose value is to be set. The attribute name is automatically converted to all lower-case when setAttribute() is called on an HTML element in an HTML document.

value

A string containing the value to assign to the attribute. Any non-string value specified is converted automatically into a string.

Boolean attributes are considered to be true if they're present on the element at all. You should set value to the empty string ("") or the attribute's name, with no leading or trailing whitespace. See the example below for a practical demonstration.

Since the specified value gets converted into a string, specifying null doesn't necessarily do what you expect. Instead of removing the attribute or setting its value to be null, it instead sets the attribute's value to the string "null". If you wish to remove an attribute, call removeAttribute().

Return value

None (undefined).

Exceptions

InvalidCharacterError DOMException

Thrown if the name value is not a valid XML name; for example, it starts with a number, a hyphen, or a period, or contains characters other than alphanumeric characters, underscores, hyphens, or periods.

Examples

In the following example, setAttribute() is used to set attributes on a <button>.

HTML

html
<button>Hello World</button>

JavaScript

js
const button = document.querySelector("button");

button.setAttribute("name", "helloButton");
button.setAttribute("disabled", "");

This demonstrates two things:

  • The first call to setAttribute() above shows changing the name attribute's value to "helloButton". You can see this using your browser's page inspector (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari).
  • To set the value of a Boolean attribute, such as disabled, you can specify any value. An empty string or the name of the attribute are recommended values. All that matters is that if the attribute is present at all, regardless of its actual value, its value is considered to be true. The absence of the attribute means its value is false. By setting the value of the disabled attribute to the empty string (""), we are setting disabled to true, which results in the button being disabled.

Specifications

Specification
DOM Standard
# ref-for-dom-element-setattribute①

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also