is it possible to remove a CSS property of an element using JavaScript ?
e.g. I have div.style.zoom = 1.2,
now i want to remove the zoom property through JavaScript ?
-
Possible duplicate of removing html element styles via javascriptT.Todua– T.Todua2016-08-31 12:31:37 +00:00Commented Aug 31, 2016 at 12:31
9 Answers
You have two options:
OPTION 1:
You can use removeProperty method. It will remove a style from an element.
el.style.removeProperty('zoom');
OPTION 2:
You can set it to the default value:
el.style.zoom = "";
The effective zoom will now be whatever follows from the definitions set in the stylesheets (through link and style tags). So this syntax will only modify the local style of this element.
5 Comments
removeProperty will remove a style from an element.
Example:
div.style.removeProperty('zoom');
MDN documentation page:
CSSStyleDeclaration.removeProperty
2 Comments
element.style.height = null;
output:
<div style="height:100px;">
// results:
<div style="">
4 Comments
IE browsers? I intentionaly ignore them already for years.You can use the styleSheets object:
document.styleSheets[0].cssRules[0].style.removeProperty("zoom");
Caveat #1: You have to know the index of your stylesheet and the index of your rule.
Caveat #2: This object is implemented inconsistently by the browsers; what works in one may not work in the others.
12 Comments
CSSStyleRule.prototype.removeProperty =( In fact CSSStyleRule doesn't have any methods. =(CSSStyleSheet.prototype.removeRule to the rescue.CSSStyleSheet.prototype.deleteRule?You can try finding all elements that have this class and setting the "zoom" property to "nothing".
If you are using jQuery javascript library, you can do it with $(".the_required_class").css("zoom","")
Edit: Removed this statement as it turned out to not be true, as pointed out in a comment and other answers it has indeed been possible since 2010.
False: there is no generally known way for modifying stylesheets from JavaScript.
4 Comments
css, not attr, you're right.actually, if you already know the property, this will do it...
for example:
<a href="test.html" style="color:white;zoom:1.2" id="MyLink"></a>
var txt = "";
txt = getStyle(InterTabLink);
setStyle(InterTabLink, txt.replace("zoom\:1\.2\;","");
function setStyle(element, styleText){
if(element.style.setAttribute)
element.style.setAttribute("cssText", styleText );
else
element.setAttribute("style", styleText );
}
/* getStyle function */
function getStyle(element){
var styleText = element.getAttribute('style');
if(styleText == null)
return "";
if (typeof styleText == 'string') // !IE
return styleText;
else // IE
return styleText.cssText;
}
Note that this only works for inline styles... not styles you've specified through a class or something like that...
Other note: you may have to escape some characters in that replace statement, but you get the idea.
Comments
To change all classes for an element:
document.getElementById("ElementID").className = "CssClass";
To add an additional class to an element:
document.getElementById("ElementID").className += " CssClass";
To check if a class is already applied to an element:
if ( document.getElementById("ElementID").className.match(/(?:^|\s)CssClass(?!\S)/) )