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JavaScript JavaScript and the DOM (Retiring) Traversing the DOM Solution: Using nextElementSibling

Lucas Herlitz
Lucas Herlitz
2,998 Points

I came up with a different solution than the instructor demonstrated. It appears to work. Is this method acceptable?

if (event.target.className == 'down') {
      let li = event.target.parentNode;
      let nextLi = li.nextElementSibling;
      let ul = li.parentNode;
      if (nextLi) {
        ul.insertBefore(li, nextLi.nextElementSibling);
      }      
    }

The goal was to create a button that would move an item down in a list. The instructor used

ul.insertBefore(nextLi, li);

where I used

ul.insertBefore(li, nextLi.nextElementSibling);

Is this a case where both are okay solutions or did the one I use possibly create problems that I'm not seeing?

1 Answer

Steven Parker
Steven Parker
231,269 Points

The "nextLi" might be the bottom one, so it might not have a next sibling. It's relying on the attribute returning a "null" value in that case, and the behavior of the function to place the element at the end when the reference is null.

While that does work, it's more verbose, and the functionality might not be as clear to a reader as the original example which always uses a valid element reference.