Satisfy is a stand-alone (no dependencies) JavaScript function for generating HTML from CSS selectors. It's incredibly simple.
This:
satisfy('div a');
Returns the following DOM structure:
<div>
<a></a>
</div>
You can use attribute selectors and a numerical psuedo-class to manipulate the produced structure further:
satisfy('ul li:5 span[innerHTML="item"]');
And that would produce this:
<ul>
<li><span>item</span></li>
<li><span>item</span></li>
<li><span>item</span></li>
<li><span>item</span></li>
<li><span>item</span></li>
</ul>
And sibling combinators (note: ~
and +
do the same thing in this context):
staisfy('div span + a');
Output:
<div>
<span></span>
<a></a>
</div>
Note: satisfy()
returns a NodeList containing the elements you want. It's not a real array.
You can set a boolean property with a no-value attribute expression (Thanks to Kangax):
satisfy('input[type=checkbox][checked]');
satisfy('audio[autoplay]');
You can also set an element's innerHTML
like so:
satisfy('div a[innerHTML=blah]');
// or:
satisfy('div a[html=blah]);
It's also possible to set multiple classes:
satisfy('a.b.c.d'); // => <a class="b c d"></a>
If you're using jQuery then you can use Satisfy like so:
jQuery.satisfy('div a:5').prependTo('body');
jQuery.satisfy
returns a jQuery instance containing all of the elements produced from whatever selector you pass to it. This makes it possible to use any of jQuery's methods... So, instead of:
jQuery('<div><a/></div>').appendTo(foo);
... you can do:
jQuery.satisfy('div a').appendTo(foo);
I re-wrote most of the code in 0.3. The mechanism now used for creating elements is mostly fragment-based and the selector is processed in reverse.