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What are the types of DOM nodes?

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If I am not mistaken any DOM "tree" node is actually a "branch", which would be an HTML element or perhaps a CSS pseudo-element, of course.

If that's true what are the different node types and especially what is TEXT_NODE here?

e.nodeType == Node.TEXT_NODE mean in JavaScript?

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No, a node is not a branch... (8 comments)

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any DOM "tree" node is actually a "branch"

Not exactly.

Document Object Model and Nodes

According to the MDN documentation, the DOM (Document Object Model) is "the data representation of the objects that comprise the structure and content of a document on the web."

It's a hierarchical tree-like structure, in which all parts of the document are organized. And by "all parts", I mean: elements, attributes, text, comments, etc. Each of these individual parts is a node.

For example, for this simple HTML:

<div id="main">
<!-- some comment -->
  <p class="paragraph" style="font-weight: bold">abc<span>def</span></p>
</div>

The DOM tree will be like this (the circles are the nodes):

DOM tree

Or, if you prefer ASCII diagrams:

                                    div#main
       ________________________________|_________________________
       |                |              |            |           |
    text     <!-- some comment -->    text       p.paragraph    text
(line break)                       (line break)      |       (line break)
                                                     |
                                              _______________
                                              |             |
                                         text ("abc")     span
                                                            |
                                                       text ("def")

Each HTML element is a node. But there are also text nodes (such as "abc" inside the paragraph and "def" inside the span, and also all the line breaks: one right after the div opening tag, another one right after the comment, and another one before the closing </div>).

Note that the comment is also a node. And the attributes are nodes as well (the id attribute in the div, and the class and style attributes in the paragraph, are all nodes), although those are not shown in the image above, because "I couldn't find space to fit them" (but they are nodes too).


nodeType

The nodeType property just returns a value that tells the type of the node.

In your code, e.nodeType == Node.TEXT_NODE is just checking if the node (referenced by variable e) is a text node. It's just a way to know the node's type (and do whatever you need based on that type).

A common use case is when you're looping through a collection of nodes and wants to do something only if the node is of a specific type (or perform a different action for each type, etc).

You can find all the existing types in the documentation and the DOM Living Standard:

Node Type Value Description
Node.ELEMENT_NODE 1 An Element node like <p> or <div>
Node.ATTRIBUTE_NODE 2 An Attribute of an Element
Node.TEXT_NODE 3 The actual Text inside an Element or Attr
Node.CDATA_SECTION_NODE 4 A CDATASection, such as <!CDATA[[ … ]]>
Node.PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODE 7 A ProcessingInstruction of an XML document, such as <?xml-stylesheet … ?>
Node.COMMENT_NODE 8 A Comment node, such as <!-- … -->
Node.DOCUMENT_NODE 9 A Document node
Node.DOCUMENT_TYPE_NODE 10 A DocumentType node, such as <!DOCTYPE html>
Node.DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT_NODE 11 A DocumentFragment node

Note that each type has a numerical value. So e.nodeType == Node.TEXT_NODE could also be written as e.nodeType == 3, but using Node.TEXT_NODE makes the code more clear IMO.

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