Node: isSameNode() 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 isSameNode()
method of the Node
interface
is a legacy alias the for the ===
strict equality operator.
That is, it tests whether two nodes are the same
(in other words, whether they reference the same object).
Note:
There is no need to use isSameNode()
; instead use the ===
strict equality operator.
Syntax
isSameNode(otherNode)
Parameters
Return value
A boolean value that is true
if both nodes are strictly equal, false
if not.
Example
In this example, we create three <div>
blocks. The first and third
have the same contents and attributes, while the second is different. Then we run some
JavaScript to compare the nodes using isSameNode()
and output the results.
HTML
<div>This is the first element.</div>
<div>This is the second element.</div>
<div>This is the first element.</div>
<p id="output"></p>
JavaScript
const output = document.getElementById("output");
const divList = document.getElementsByTagName("div");
output.innerText += `div 0 same as div 0: ${divList[0].isSameNode(
divList[0],
)}\n`;
output.innerText += `div 0 same as div 1: ${divList[0].isSameNode(
divList[1],
)}\n`;
output.innerText += `div 0 same as div 2: ${divList[0].isSameNode(
divList[2],
)}\n`;
Results
Specifications
Specification |
---|
DOM Standard # dom-node-issamenode |
Browser compatibility
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