There's insertBefore()
in JavaScript, but how can I insert an element after another element without using jQuery or another library?
20 Answers
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling);
Where referenceNode
is the node you want to put newNode
after. If referenceNode
is the last child within its parent element, that's fine, because referenceNode.nextSibling
will be null
and insertBefore
handles that case by adding to the end of the list.
So:
function insertAfter(referenceNode, newNode) {
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling);
}
You can test it using the following snippet:
function insertAfter(referenceNode, newNode) {
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling);
}
var el = document.createElement("span");
el.innerHTML = "test";
var div = document.getElementById("foo");
insertAfter(div, el);
<div id="foo">Hello</div>
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15Thanks for a great answer, but isn't it confusing to flip referenceNode and newNode in the arguments list? Why not comply with the insertBefore syntax?– GijsjanBCommented Nov 14, 2013 at 16:09
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11This code snippet doesn't handle if the referenceNode is the last child, in which it should appendChild. Commented Oct 8, 2014 at 6:04
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97According to MDN if the element is last (and so nextSibling is null) the newNode will be appended as expected Commented Nov 25, 2014 at 16:07
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9referenceNode.nextElementSibling is a better option to be used Commented Aug 8, 2016 at 7:30
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11@BhumiSinghal: Wrong.
insertBefore()
works with text nodes. Why do you wantinsertAfter()
to be different? You should create a separate pair of functions namedinsertBeforeElement()
andinsertAfterElement()
for that. Commented Mar 19, 2017 at 13:58
Explicitly and simply:
refElem.insertAdjacentElement(position, newElem)
It lets you reference any element, and insert the to-be moved element exactly where you want. The position can be one of: 'beforebegin'
, 'afterbegin'
, 'beforeend'
, 'afterend'
) as shown here:
// refElem.insertAdjacentElement('beforebegin', myElem);
<p id="refElem">
// refElem.insertAdjacentElement('afterbegin', myElem);
... content ...
// refElem.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', myElem);
</p>
// refElem.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', myElem);
Other related options to consider are insertAdjacentHTML()
and insertAdjacentText()
References:
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11Should really give this answer some love, it's the modern approach for the 2020s that are quickly approaching. Commented Oct 28, 2019 at 20:45
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21How come this answer is burried so deep? I shall reward it some points to bring more attention.– QwertyCommented May 19, 2020 at 20:36
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2A little side note, that it's not working for document fragments. Commented Aug 25, 2020 at 15:08
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2
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2This should be the accepted answer for this question. All of the other responses including the accepted answer fail to show the html so that we can see a visual representation of how the JavaScript will alter the DOM. Commented Sep 18, 2023 at 19:48
Straightforward JavaScript would be the following:
Append Before:
element.parentNode.insertBefore(newElement, element);
Append After:
element.parentNode.insertBefore(newElement, element.nextSibling);
But toss some prototypes in there for ease of use:
By building the following prototypes, you will be able to call these function directly from newly created elements.
newElement.appendBefore(element);
newElement.appendAfter(element);
.appendBefore(element) Prototype
Element.prototype.appendBefore = function (element) {
element.parentNode.insertBefore(this, element);
},false;
.appendAfter(element) Prototype
Element.prototype.appendAfter = function (element) {
element.parentNode.insertBefore(this, element.nextSibling);
},false;
Code Snippet to see it all in action:
/* Adds Element BEFORE NeighborElement */
Element.prototype.appendBefore = function(element) {
element.parentNode.insertBefore(this, element);
}, false;
/* Adds Element AFTER NeighborElement */
Element.prototype.appendAfter = function(element) {
element.parentNode.insertBefore(this, element.nextSibling);
}, false;
/* Typical Creation and Setup A New Orphaned Element Object */
var NewElement = document.createElement('div');
NewElement.innerHTML = 'New Element';
NewElement.id = 'NewElement';
/* Add NewElement BEFORE -OR- AFTER Using the Aforementioned Prototypes */
NewElement.appendAfter(document.getElementById('Neighbor2'));
div {
text-align: center;
}
#Neighborhood {
color: brown;
}
#NewElement {
color: green;
}
<div id="Neighborhood">
<div id="Neighbor1">Neighbor 1</div>
<div id="Neighbor2">Neighbor 2</div>
<div id="Neighbor3">Neighbor 3</div>
</div>
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4The extension function names are misleading. It think it should rather be called appendMeBefore and appendMeAfter. I thought it was used like the appendChild() Method, e.g.
existingElement.appendAfter(newElement);
. See what I mean at this updated jsfiddle.– stomtechCommented May 25, 2017 at 9:43 -
3Append After works, because if element.nextSibling does not have a next sibling, nextSibling is NULL, and then it will append at the end. Commented Oct 11, 2019 at 14:50
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I get warnings in jslint: Expected ';' and instead saw ','. }, false;– castonCommented Nov 24, 2020 at 4:23
2022 Solution - Element
EDIT: As of 2021 and beyond, ChildNode has been merged into Element. I am changing this answer as such.
New documentation: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element
This is exactly the same as ChildNode. The "before", "after" and "remove" properties are just now part of the normal element api.
// Parent
const el = document.body;
// New Element
const newEl = document.createElement("div");
// Insert Before Element
el.before(newEl);
// Insert After Element
// Technically this would be invalid because
// I already inserted newEl before el.
// newEl changed location and is no longer a floating element.
// You cant insert one element in two places at once.
el.after(newEl);
// Another extra feature originally added with ChildNode is the .remove() method,
// which deletes the element from the DOM
el.remove();
newEl.remove();
2019 Solution (Outdated)
I do not reccomend using this solution, but Ill keep it here for the sake of "history"
This is safer then using a polyfill-type prototype override, its just a basic function. Sure its not very pretty, but it works.
// Parent
const el = document.body;
// New Element
const newEl = document.createElement("div");
// Function You Need
function insertAfter(el0, el1) {
el0.parentNode.insertBefore(el1, el0.nextSibling);
}
// Insert Before Element
el.insertBefore(newEl);
// Insert After Element
insertAfter(el, newEl);
// Just remember you cant use insertAfter() or .insertBefore()
// on newEl more than once.
// You cant insert one element in two places at once.
Original Solution (Bad Practice)
I do not reccomend using this solution, it was the one I initially used when posting this answer. Ill keep it here for the sake of "history"
This is just a polyfill for the .insertAfter function that doesnt exist. This prototype directly adds the function HTMLElement.insertAfter(element);
to the HTMLElement Prototype:
// Parent
const el = document.body;
// New Element
const newEl = document.createElement("div");
// Custom Method
Element.prototype.insertAfter = function(new) {
this.parentNode.insertBefore(new, this.nextSibling);
}
// Insert Before Element
el.insertBefore(newEl)
// Insert After Element
el.insertAfter(newEl);
// Just remember you cant use .insertAfter() or .insertBefore()
// on newEl more than once.
// You cant insert one element in two places at once.
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2About "2020 solution":
before
andafter
are both marked as "experimental" on MDN page:Experimental. Expect behavior to change in the future.
– izogfifCommented Dec 10, 2020 at 13:02 -
4@izogfif Well, Considering its just got into the living standards, that's expected. I highly doubt they will significantly change the behavior of the method to fit a new standard. If they do, I will edit the answer. The only reason that's on the MDN docs is most likely because it was recently added to the Living Standard, so its still "experimental" even though its stable and on the current release Commented Dec 10, 2020 at 15:02
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2@Mircea If you want it to work on IE, use the polyfill suggested in my answer. (Though lets be honest here, I doubt anyone really cares for IE anymore, I personally dont support it anymore) Commented Apr 3, 2021 at 17:25
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11
before
andafter
are no longer marked as "experimental" on the MDN page: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/before developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/after– OptimaeCommented Feb 19, 2022 at 6:40
insertAdjacentHTML
+ outerHTML
elementBefore.insertAdjacentHTML('afterEnd', elementAfter.outerHTML)
Upsides:
- DRYer: you don't have to store the before node in a variable and use it twice. If you rename the variable, on less occurrence to modify.
- golfs better than the
insertBefore
(break even if the existing node variable name is 3 chars long)
Downsides:
- lower browser support since newer: https://caniuse.com/#feat=insert-adjacent
- will lose properties of the element such as events because
outerHTML
converts the element to a string. We need it becauseinsertAdjacentHTML
adds content from strings rather than elements.
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23If you already have the element constructed, you can use
.insertAdjacentElement()
– GetFreeCommented Mar 13, 2018 at 17:05 -
12As of 2018, browser support looks pretty solid: caniuse.com/#feat=insert-adjacent– madannesCommented May 30, 2018 at 14:26
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2This was a nice solution, i suggest eveyone read this xahlee.info/js/js_insert_after.html Commented Dec 31, 2019 at 12:45
A quick Google search reveals this script
// create function, it expects 2 values.
function insertAfter(newElement,targetElement) {
// target is what you want it to go after. Look for this elements parent.
var parent = targetElement.parentNode;
// if the parents lastchild is the targetElement...
if (parent.lastChild == targetElement) {
// add the newElement after the target element.
parent.appendChild(newElement);
} else {
// else the target has siblings, insert the new element between the target and it's next sibling.
parent.insertBefore(newElement, targetElement.nextSibling);
}
}
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30For anyone who stumbles upon this script, I don't recommend using it. It attempts to solve problems that @karim79's native solution already solves. His script is faster and more efficient - I'd strongly recommend using that script instead of this one. Commented Nov 11, 2013 at 11:40
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10As a general-rule-of-thumb in JavaScript, the browser can do a task faster than anything you can write. Although the two solutions are functionally the same, my JavaScript solution needs to be read an understood by the browser before it can be used and requires an additional check each time it's executed. The solution offered by karim79 will do all this internally, saving those steps. The difference will be trivial at best, but his solution is the better one. Commented Nov 26, 2014 at 17:10
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3In other words, it's attempting to solve a problem that doesn't exist. There's nothing inherently wrong about the extra check, but I suppose it's not propagating the best understanding of these methods– 1j01Commented Mar 23, 2015 at 2:43
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3Pretty much. I'm leaving the script here because it's the kind of thing I used to write, but the accepted answer is the better one, shows a better understanding of the methods and is faster. There's no reason use this answer instead - I'm not even sure why it still gets upvotes Commented Mar 23, 2015 at 11:58
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3If targetElement is the last element amongst it's siblings, then
targetElement.nextSibling
will returnnull
. Whennode.insertBefore
is called withnull
as it's second argument, then it will add the node at the end of the collection. In other words theif(parent.lastchild == targetElement) {
branch is superfluous, becauseparent.insertBefore(newElement, targetElement.nextSibling);
will deal properly with all cases, even though it may appear otherwise at first. Many have already pointed that out in other comments.– RolfCommented Nov 7, 2016 at 11:12
The method node.after
(doc) inserts a node after another node.
For two DOM nodes node1
and node2
,
node1.after(node2)
inserts node2
after node1
.
This method is not available in older browsers, so usually a polyfill is needed.
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This takes a bit of manual work to implement as a functioning insertAfter though, so unfortunately I dont think this would work correctly. Commented Dec 18, 2019 at 12:42
Or you can simply do:
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore( newNode, referenceNode )
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore( referenceNode, newNode )
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I wouldn't have thought of that approach. I'd prefer to use @karim79's more direct answer, but good to keep in mind.– Ben JCommented Mar 24, 2016 at 8:29
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This is the simplest way we can add an element after another one using vanilla javascript
var d1 = document.getElementById('one');
d1.insertAdjacentHTML('afterend', '<div id="two">two</div>');
Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/insertAdjacentHTML
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Not really. This appends to the end or beginning, NOT after another element. Commented Aug 4, 2020 at 17:12
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2@MartinJames It actually DOES APPEND AFTER another element. There are four possible insertPositions: beforebegin - Inserts element BEFORE the current node beforeend - Appends element to the end of current node. So element becomes the last child of current node afterbegin - Prepends element to the beginning of current node. So element becomes first child of current node afterend - Inserts element AFTER current node. So element becomes the nextSibling of current node– flashCommented Oct 4, 2020 at 1:50
Step 1. Prepare Elements :
var element = document.getElementById('ElementToAppendAfter');
var newElement = document.createElement('div');
var elementParent = element.parentNode;
Step 2. Append after :
elementParent.insertBefore(newElement, element.nextSibling);
You can actually a method called after()
in newer version of Chrome, Firefox and Opera. The downside of this method is that Internet Explorer doesn't support it yet.
Example:
// You could create a simple node
var node = document.createElement('p')
// And then get the node where you want to append the created node after
var existingNode = document.getElementById('id_of_the_element')
// Finally you can append the created node to the exisitingNode
existingNode.after(node)
A simple HTML Code to test that is:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<p id='up'>Up</p>
<p id="down">Down</p>
<button id="switchBtn" onclick="switch_place()">Switch place</button>
<script>
function switch_place(){
var downElement = document.getElementById("down")
var upElement = document.getElementById("up")
downElement.after(upElement);
document.getElementById('switchBtn').innerHTML = "Switched!"
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
As expected, it moves the up element after the down element
insertBefore() method is used like parentNode.insertBefore()
.
So to imitate this and make a method parentNode.insertAfter()
we can write the following code.
JavaScript
Node.prototype.insertAfter = function(newNode, referenceNode) {
return referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore(
newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling); // based on karim79's solution
};
// getting required handles
var refElem = document.getElementById("pTwo");
var parent = refElem.parentNode;
// creating <p>paragraph three</p>
var txt = document.createTextNode("paragraph three");
var paragraph = document.createElement("p");
paragraph.appendChild(txt);
// now we can call it the same way as insertBefore()
parent.insertAfter(paragraph, refElem);
HTML
<div id="divOne">
<p id="pOne">paragraph one</p>
<p id="pTwo">paragraph two</p>
</div>
Note, that extending the DOM might not be the right solution for You as stated in this article.
Hovewer, this article was written in 2010 and things might be different now. So decide on Your own.
Ideally insertAfter
should work similar to insertBefore. The code below will perform the following:
- If there are no children, the new
Node
is appended - If there is no reference
Node
, the newNode
is appended - If there is no
Node
after the referenceNode
, the newNode
is appended - If there the reference
Node
has a sibling after, then the newNode
is inserted before that sibling - Returns the new
Node
Extending Node
Node.prototype.insertAfter = function(node, referenceNode) {
if (node)
this.insertBefore(node, referenceNode && referenceNode.nextSibling);
return node;
};
One common example
node.parentNode.insertAfter(newNode, node);
See the code running
// First extend
Node.prototype.insertAfter = function(node, referenceNode) {
if (node)
this.insertBefore(node, referenceNode && referenceNode.nextSibling);
return node;
};
var referenceNode,
newNode;
newNode = document.createElement('li')
newNode.innerText = 'First new item';
newNode.style.color = '#FF0000';
document.getElementById('no-children').insertAfter(newNode);
newNode = document.createElement('li');
newNode.innerText = 'Second new item';
newNode.style.color = '#FF0000';
document.getElementById('no-reference-node').insertAfter(newNode);
referenceNode = document.getElementById('no-sibling-after');
newNode = document.createElement('li');
newNode.innerText = 'Third new item';
newNode.style.color = '#FF0000';
referenceNode.parentNode.insertAfter(newNode, referenceNode);
referenceNode = document.getElementById('sibling-after');
newNode = document.createElement('li');
newNode.innerText = 'Fourth new item';
newNode.style.color = '#FF0000';
referenceNode.parentNode.insertAfter(newNode, referenceNode);
<h5>No children</h5>
<ul id="no-children"></ul>
<h5>No reference node</h5>
<ul id="no-reference-node">
<li>First item</li>
</ul>
<h5>No sibling after</h5>
<ul>
<li id="no-sibling-after">First item</li>
</ul>
<h5>Sibling after</h5>
<ul>
<li id="sibling-after">First item</li>
<li>Third item</li>
</ul>
I know this question has far too many answers already, but none of them met my exact requirements.
I wanted a function that has the exact opposite behavior of parentNode.insertBefore
- that is, it must accept a null referenceNode
(which the accepted answer does not) and where insertBefore
would insert at the end of the children this one must insert at the start, since otherwise there'd be no way to insert at the start location with this function at all; the same reason insertBefore
inserts at the end.
Since a null referenceNode
requires you to locate the parent, we need to know the parent - insertBefore
is a method of the parentNode
, so it has access to the parent that way; our function doesn't, so we'll need to pass the parent as a parameter.
The resulting function looks like this:
function insertAfter(parentNode, newNode, referenceNode) {
parentNode.insertBefore(
newNode,
referenceNode ? referenceNode.nextSibling : parentNode.firstChild
);
}
Or (if you must, I don't recommend it) you can of course enhance the Node
prototype:
if (! Node.prototype.insertAfter) {
Node.prototype.insertAfter = function(newNode, referenceNode) {
this.insertBefore(
newNode,
referenceNode ? referenceNode.nextSibling : this.firstChild
);
};
}
I use the following to insert options at the end of a select. By just passing null as the second argument. I'm not sure if this is an anomaly to "select" elements as I've never tried it on anything else but may help if anyone comes here looking for this. Works on IE too (amazingly). :)
var x = document.getElementById("SELECT_LIST");
var boption = document.createElement("option");
boption.text = "SOME TEXT";
boption.value = "SOME VALUE";
x.insertBefore(boption, null);
This code is work to insert a link item right after the last existing child to inlining a small css file
var raf, cb=function(){
//create newnode
var link=document.createElement('link');
link.rel='stylesheet';link.type='text/css';link.href='css/style.css';
//insert after the lastnode
var nodes=document.getElementsByTagName('link'); //existing nodes
var lastnode=document.getElementsByTagName('link')[nodes.length-1];
lastnode.parentNode.insertBefore(link, lastnode.nextSibling);
};
//check before insert
try {
raf=requestAnimationFrame||
mozRequestAnimationFrame||
webkitRequestAnimationFrame||
msRequestAnimationFrame;
}
catch(err){
raf=false;
}
if (raf)raf(cb); else window.addEventListener('load',cb);
You can use appendChild
function to insert after an element.
Reference: http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/met_node_appendchild.asp
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This solution doesn't work for 2 p tags.. you cannot add a p tag after another p tag with this function .. Commented Dec 31, 2019 at 12:03
Lets handle all the scenarios
function insertAfter(newNode, referenceNode) {
if(referenceNode && referenceNode.nextSibling && referenceNode.nextSibling.nodeName == '#text')
referenceNode = referenceNode.nextSibling;
if(!referenceNode)
document.body.appendChild(newNode);
else if(!referenceNode.nextSibling)
document.body.appendChild(newNode);
else
referenceNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling);
}
if( !Element.prototype.insertAfter ) {
Element.prototype.insertAfter = function(item, reference) {
if( reference.nextSibling )
reference.parentNode.insertBefore(item, reference.nextSibling);
else
reference.parentNode.appendChild(item);
};
}
a robust implementation of insertAfter.
// source: https://github.com/jserz/domPlus/blob/master/src/insertAfter()/insertAfter.js
Node.prototype.insertAfter = Node.prototype.insertAfter || function (newNode, referenceNode) {
function isNode(node) {
return node instanceof Node;
}
if(arguments.length < 2){
throw(new TypeError("Failed to execute 'insertAfter' on 'Node': 2 arguments required, but only "+ arguments.length +" present."));
}
if(isNode(newNode)){
if(referenceNode === null || referenceNode === undefined){
return this.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode);
}
if(isNode(referenceNode)){
return this.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode.nextSibling);
}
throw(new TypeError("Failed to execute 'insertAfter' on 'Node': parameter 2 is not of type 'Node'."));
}
throw(new TypeError("Failed to execute 'insertAfter' on 'Node': parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'."));
};
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Add some explanation with answer for how this answer help OP in fixing current issue Commented Jan 15, 2017 at 4:27
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Run the code above,then you can insert a newNode after the specified referenceNode.– jszhouCommented Jan 15, 2017 at 5:04
after
function, which gained browser support around 2016, but is not supported by IE. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/after