Document: getElementsByClassName() 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 getElementsByClassName method of Document interface returns an array-like object of all child elements which have all of the given class name(s).

When called on the document object, the complete document is searched, including the root node. You may also call getElementsByClassName() on any element; it will return only elements which are descendants of the specified root element with the given class name(s).

Warning: This is a live HTMLCollection. Changes in the DOM will reflect in the array as the changes occur. If an element selected by this array no longer qualifies for the selector, it will automatically be removed. Be aware of this for iteration purposes.

Syntax

js
getElementsByClassName(names)

Parameters

names

A string representing the class name(s) to match; multiple class names are separated by whitespace.

Return value

A live HTMLCollection of found elements.

Examples

Get all elements that have a class of 'test':

js
document.getElementsByClassName("test");

Get all elements that have both the 'red' and 'test' classes:

js
document.getElementsByClassName("red test");

Get all elements that have a class of 'test', inside of an element that has the ID of 'main':

js
document.getElementById("main").getElementsByClassName("test");

Get the first element with a class of 'test', or undefined if there is no matching element:

js
document.getElementsByClassName("test")[0];

We can also use methods of Array.prototype on any HTMLCollection by passing the HTMLCollection as the method's this value. Here we'll find all div elements that have a class of 'test':

js
const testElements = document.getElementsByClassName("test");
const testDivs = Array.prototype.filter.call(
  testElements,
  (testElement) => testElement.nodeName === "DIV",
);

Get the first element whose class is 'test'

This is the most commonly used method of operation.

html
<html lang="en">
  <body>
    <div id="parent-id">
      <p>hello world 1</p>
      <p class="test">hello world 2</p>
      <p>hello world 3</p>
      <p>hello world 4</p>
    </div>

    <script>
      const parentDOM = document.getElementById("parent-id");

      const test = parentDOM.getElementsByClassName("test"); // a list of matching elements, *not* the element itself
      console.log(test); // HTMLCollection[1]

      const testTarget = parentDOM.getElementsByClassName("test")[0]; // the first element, as we wanted
      console.log(testTarget); // <p class="test">hello world 2</p>
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

Multiple Classes Example

document.getElementsByClassName works very similarly to document.querySelector and document.querySelectorAll. Only elements with ALL of the classNames specified are selected.

HTML

html
<span class="orange fruit">Orange Fruit</span>
<span class="orange juice">Orange Juice</span>
<span class="apple juice">Apple Juice</span>
<span class="foo bar">Something Random</span>
<textarea id="resultArea" style="width:98%;height:7em"></textarea>

JavaScript

js
// getElementsByClassName only selects elements that have both given classes
const allOrangeJuiceByClass = document.getElementsByClassName("orange juice");
let result = "document.getElementsByClassName('orange juice')";
for (let i = 0; i < allOrangeJuiceByClass.length; i++) {
  result += `\n  ${allOrangeJuiceByClass[i].textContent}`;
}

// querySelector only selects full complete matches
const allOrangeJuiceQuery = document.querySelectorAll(".orange.juice");
result += "\n\ndocument.querySelectorAll('.orange.juice')";
for (let i = 0; i < allOrangeJuiceQuery.length; i++) {
  result += `\n  ${allOrangeJuiceQuery[i].textContent}`;
}

document.getElementById("resultArea").value = result;

Result

Specifications

Specification
DOM Standard
# ref-for-dom-document-getelementsbyclassname①

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser