JavaScript object that creates a unique CSS selector for a given DOM element or multiple DOM elements.
It also generates shorter selectors and is faster and/or more robust than many other libraries - see this comparison and select the best alternative for your use case.
Add the library to your project via NPM or Yarn.
npm install css-selector-generator
yarn add css-selector-generator
Then include it in your source code:
import { getCssSelector } from "css-selector-generator";
Simplest way to use it is to provide an element reference, without any options.
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="myElement"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement);
// ".myElement"
Typical example is to create a selector for any element that the user clicks on:
// track every click
document.body.addEventListener("click", function (event) {
// get reference to the element user clicked on
const element = event.target;
// get unique CSS selector for that element
const selector = getCssSelector(element);
// do whatever you need to do with that selector
console.log("selector", selector);
});
If you don't want to use this library with NPM, you can download it directly from the "build" folder and insert it to your HTML document directly. In this case, the library is wrapped in namespace CssSelectorGenerator
. So the usage would look something like this:
<!-- link the library -->
<script src="build/index.js"></script>
<script>
CssSelectorGenerator.getCssSelector(targetElement)
</script
If you want to use this library with Node, usually for testing, don't require it directly into the Node process. It will not work, because there's no window
object and there are no elements to select. Instead, you have to add the library to the virtual window
object. Here are instructions how to do it in JSDOM, other libraries will work in a similar way:
https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom/wiki/Don't-stuff-jsdom-globals-onto-the-Node-global
This library also allows you to create selector targeting multiple elements at once. You do that by calling the same function, but you provide an array of elements instead of single element:
<body>
<!-- firstElement -->
<div class="aaa bbb"></div>
<!-- secondElement -->
<span class="bbb ccc"></span>
</body>
getCssSelector([firstElement, secondElement]);
// ".bbb"
If it is not possible to construct single selector for all elements a standalone selector for each element will be generated:
<body>
<!-- firstElement -->
<div></div>
<!-- secondElement -->
<span></span>
</body>
getCssSelector([firstElement, secondElement]);
// "div, span"
getCssSelector
determines the shortest CSS selector for parent -> child relationship, from the input Element until the Root Element.
If there is no unique selector available for any of these relationships (parent -> child), a fallback of *
will be used for this relationship.
#wrapper > * > div > .text
In some cases, this selector may not be unique (e.g. #wrapper > * > div > *
). In this case, it will fall back to an entire chain of :nth-child
selectors like:
":nth-child(2) > :nth-child(4) > :nth-child(1) > :nth-child(12)"
selectors
root
blacklist
combineWithinSelector
combineBetweenSelectors
includeTag
maxCombinations
maxCandidates
You can choose which types of selectors do you want to use:
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="myElement"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { selectors: ["class"] });
// ".myElement"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { selectors: ["tag"] });
// "div"
Order of selector types defines their priority:
getCssSelector(targetElement, { selectors: ["class", "tag"] });
// ".myElement"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { selectors: ["tag", "class"] });
// "div"
Valid selector types are:
id
class
tag
attribute
nthchild
nthoftype
You can define root element, from which the selector will be created. If root element is not defined, document root will be used:
<body>
<div class="myRootElement">
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="myElement"></div>
</div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement);
// ".myRootElement > .myElement"
getCssSelector(targetElement, {
root: document.querySelector(".myRootElement"),
});
// ".myElement"
If you want to ignore some selectors, you can put them on the blacklist. Blacklist is an array that can contain either regular expressions, strings and/or functions.
In strings, you can use an asterisk (*
) as a wildcard that will match any number of any characters.
Functions will receive a selector as a parameter. They should always return boolean, true
if it is a match, false
if it is not. Any other type of return value will be ignored.
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="firstClass secondClass"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { blacklist: [".firstClass"] });
// ".secondClass"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { blacklist: [".first*"] });
// ".secondClass"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { blacklist: [/first/] });
// ".secondClass"
getCssSelector(targetElement, {
blacklist: [(input) => input.startsWith(".second")],
});
// ".secondClass"
You can target selectors of any types using the blacklist.
getCssSelector(targetElement, {
blacklist: [
// ID selector
"#forbiddenId",
// class selector
".forbiddenClass",
// attribute selector
"[forbidden-attribute]",
// tag selector
"div",
],
});
Same as blacklist
option, but instead of ignoring matching selectors, they will be prioritised.
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="firstClass secondClass"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { whitelist: [".secondClass"] });
// ".secondClass"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { whitelist: [".second*"] });
// ".secondClass"
getCssSelector(targetElement, { whitelist: [/second/] });
// ".secondClass"
If set to true
, the generator will try to look for combinations of selectors within a single type (usually class names) to get better overall selector.
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="aaa bbb"></div>
<div class="aaa ccc"></div>
<div class="bbb ccc"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { combineWithinSelector: false });
// "body > :nth-child(1)" - in this case no single class name is unique
getCssSelector(targetElement, { combineWithinSelector: true });
// ".aaa.bbb"
This option is set to true
by default. It can be set to false
for performance reasons.
If set to true
, the generator will try to look for combinations of selectors between various types (e.g. tag name + class name) to get better overall selector.
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="aaa"></div>
<div class="bbb"></div>
<p class="aaa"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { combineBetweenSelectors: false });
// "body > :nth-child(1)" - in this case no single class name or tag name is unique
getCssSelector(targetElement, { combineBetweenSelectors: true });
// "div.aaa"
This option is set to true
by default. It can be set to false
for performance reasons.
This option will add tag selector type to every selector:
<body>
<!-- targetElement -->
<div class="myElement"></div>
</body>
getCssSelector(targetElement, { includeTag: true });
// "div.myElement"
This is a performance optimization option that can help when trying to find a CSS selector within elements that contain large numbers of class names (e.g. because of frameworks that create atomic styles) or other attributes.
In such case, the number of possible combinations between class names can be too large (it grows exponentially) and can significantly slow down selector generation. In reality, if the selector is not found within first few combinations, it usually won't be found within the rest of combinations.
getCssSelector(targetElement, { maxCombinations: 100 });
Performance optimization option, similar to maxCombinations
. This does limit a total number of selector candidates for each element.
You should use it in cases, when there are not too many class names and attributes, but they are numerous enough to produce large number of combinations between them.
getCssSelector(targetElement, { maxCandidates: 100 });
If you found any bugs, if you have feature requests or any questions, please, either file an issue on GitHub or send me an e-mail at [email protected]
CSS Selector Generator is published under the MIT license.