243
votes

I've got 2 ways I can create a <div> using jQuery.

Either:

var div = $("<div></div>");
$("#box").append(div);

Or:

$("#box").append("<div></div>");

What are the drawbacks of using second way other than re-usability?

8
It's just matter of reusability. Your call.Roko C. Buljan
@gdoron by reusability I mean : if you have an element inside a variable, than you can re-call that var wherever you need, just like in your example.Roko C. Buljan
Why .html, but not .append in 2nd case?Engineer
@Engineer - Sorry, that was mistake here. I corrected that.Ashwin
I thought the latter method was faster in terms of speed execution but the first one seems (10% ~ 40%) faster: jsperf.com/jquery-append-string-vs-append-jquery-referenceFabrizio Calderan

8 Answers

360
votes

The first option gives you more flexibilty:

var $div = $("<div>", {id: "foo", "class": "a"});
$div.click(function(){ /* ... */ });
$("#box").append($div);

And of course .html('*') overrides the content while .append('*') doesn't, but I guess, this wasn't your question.

Another good practice is prefixing your jQuery variables with $:
Is there any specific reason behind using $ with variable in jQuery

Placing quotes around the "class" property name will make it more compatible with less flexible browsers.

79
votes

I personally think that it's more important for the code to be readable and editable than performant. Whichever one you find easier to look at and it should be the one you choose for above factors. You can write it as:

$('#box').append(
  $('<div/>')
    .attr("id", "newDiv1")
    .addClass("newDiv purple bloated")
    .append("<span/>")
      .text("hello world")
);

And your first Method as:

// create an element with an object literal, defining properties
var $e = $("<div>", {id: "newDiv1", name: 'test', class: "aClass"});
$e.click(function(){ /* ... */ });
// add the element to the body
$("#box").append($e);

But as far as readability goes; the jQuery approach is my favorite. Follow this Helpful jQuery Tricks, Notes, and Best Practices

27
votes

Much more expressive way,

jQuery('<div/>', {
    "id": 'foo',
    "name": 'mainDiv',
    "class": 'wrapper',
    "click": function() {
      jQuery(this).toggleClass("test");
    }}).appendTo('selector');

Reference: Docs

8
votes

According to the jQuery official documentation

To create a HTML element, $("<div/>") or $("<div></div>") is preferred.

Then you can use either appendTo, append, before, after and etc,. to insert the new element to the DOM.

PS: jQuery Version 1.11.x

3
votes

According to the documentation for 3.4, It is preferred to use attributes with attr() method.

$('<div></div>').attr(
  {
    id: 'some dynanmic|static id',
    "class": 'some dynanmic|static class'
  }
).click(function() {
  $( "span", this ).addClass( "bar" ); // example from the docs
});
0
votes

I would recommend the first option, where you actually build elements using jQuery. the second approach simply sets the innerHTML property of the element to a string, which happens to be HTML, and is more error prone and less flexible.

0
votes

If #box is empty, nothing, but if it's not these do very different things. The former will add a div as the last child node of #box. The latter completely replaces the contents of #box with a single empty div, text and all.

0
votes

It is also possible to create a div element in the following way:

var my_div = document.createElement('div');

add class

my_div.classList.add('col-10');

also can perform append() and appendChild()