The DOM and JavaScript
We'll dive deeper into the DOM by discussing DOM data types and the properties and methods used to access DOM elements using JavaScript.
Read this article and locate the methods used with the "window" and "document" objects. For example, when a program uses an alert, it uses the "window.alert" method. JavaScript uses the "window.onload" method when a page is loaded. When a user clicks an element on a page, the "onclick" method is called. Remember that calling a method for an object uses dot (.) notation.
The previous short example, like nearly all examples, is JavaScript. That is to say, it is written in JavaScript, but uses the DOM to access the document and its elements. The DOM is not a programming language, but without it, the JavaScript language wouldn't have any model or notion of web pages, HTML documents, SVG documents, and their component parts. The document as a whole, the head, tables within the document, table headers, text within the table cells, and all other elements in a document are parts of the document object model for that document. They can all be accessed and manipulated using the DOM and a scripting language like JavaScript.
The DOM is not part of the JavaScript language, but is instead a Web API used to build websites. JavaScript can also be used in other contexts. For example, Node.js runs JavaScript programs on a computer, but provides a different set of APIs, and the DOM API is not a core part of the Node.js runtime.
The DOM was designed to be independent of any particular programming language, making the structural representation of the document available from a single, consistent API. Even if most web developers will only use the DOM through JavaScript, implementations of the DOM can be built for any language, as this Python example demonstrates:
# Python DOM example import xml.dom.minidom as m doc = m.parse(r"C:\Projects\Py\chap1.xml") doc.nodeName # DOM property of document object p_list = doc.getElementsByTagName("para")
For more information on what technologies are involved in writing JavaScript on the web, see JavaScript technologies overview.