Document: createElement() 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.
In an HTML document, the document.createElement()
method creates the HTML element specified by tagName, or an HTMLUnknownElement
if tagName isn't recognized.
Syntax
createElement(tagName)
createElement(tagName, options)
Parameters
tagName
-
A string that specifies the type of element to be created. The
nodeName
of the created element is initialized with the value of tagName. Don't use qualified names (like "html:a") with this method. When called on an HTML document,createElement()
converts tagName to lower case before creating the element. In Firefox, Opera, and Chrome,createElement(null)
works likecreateElement("null")
. options
Optional-
An object with the following properties:
is
-
The tag name of a custom element previously defined via
customElements.define()
. See Web component example for more details.
Return value
The new Element
.
Note: A new HTMLElement is returned if the document is an HTMLDocument, which is the most common case. Otherwise a new Element is returned.
Examples
Basic example
This creates a new <div>
and inserts it before the element with the ID div1
.
HTML
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en-US">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<title>Working with elements</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="div1">The text above has been created dynamically.</div>
</body>
</html>
JavaScript
document.body.onload = addElement;
function addElement() {
// create a new div element
const newDiv = document.createElement("div");
// and give it some content
const newContent = document.createTextNode("Hi there and greetings!");
// add the text node to the newly created div
newDiv.appendChild(newContent);
// add the newly created element and its content into the DOM
const currentDiv = document.getElementById("div1");
document.body.insertBefore(newDiv, currentDiv);
}
Result
Web component example
Note:
Check the browser compatibility section for support, and the is
attribute reference for caveats on implementation reality of custom built-in elements.
The following example snippet is taken from our expanding-list-web-component example (see it live also). In this case, our custom element extends the HTMLUListElement
, which represents the <ul>
element.
// Create a class for the element
class ExpandingList extends HTMLUListElement {
constructor() {
// Always call super first in constructor
super();
// constructor definition left out for brevity
// …
}
}
// Define the new element
customElements.define("expanding-list", ExpandingList, { extends: "ul" });
If we wanted to create an instance of this element programmatically, we'd use a call along the following lines:
let expandingList = document.createElement("ul", { is: "expanding-list" });
The new element will be given an is
attribute whose value is the custom element's tag name.
Note: For backwards compatibility with previous versions of the Custom Elements specification, some browsers will allow you to pass a string here instead of an object, where the string's value is the custom element's tag name.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
DOM Standard # ref-for-dom-document-createelement① |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
Node.removeChild()
Node.replaceChild()
Node.appendChild()
Node.insertBefore()
Node.hasChildNodes()
document.createElementNS()
— to explicitly specify the namespace URI for the element.