The removeChild()
method of the Node
interface removes a child node from the DOM and returns the removed node.
Note: As long as a reference is kept on the removed child, it still exists in memory, but is no longer part of the DOM. It can still be reused later in the code.
If the return value of removeChild()
is not stored, and no other reference is kept, it will be automatically deleted from memory after a short time.
Unlike Node.cloneNode()
the return value preserves the EventListener
objects associated with it.
Given this HTML:
<div id="parent">
<div id="child"></div>
</div>
To remove a specified element when knowing its parent node:
const parent = document.getElementById("parent");
const child = document.getElementById("child");
const throwawayNode = parent.removeChild(child);
To remove a specified element without having to specify its parent node:
const node = document.getElementById("child");
if (node.parentNode) {
node.parentNode.removeChild(node);
}
To remove all children from an element:
const element = document.getElementById("idOfParent");
while (element.firstChild) {
element.removeChild(element.firstChild);
}
const parent = document.getElementById("parent");
const child = document.getElementById("child");
const garbage = parent.removeChild(child);
<div id="parent">
<div id="child"></div>
</div>
const parent = document.getElementById("parent");
const child = document.getElementById("child");
const garbage = parent.removeChild(child);
garbage = parent.removeChild(child);