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Home/ Questions/Q 7870527
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 3, 20262026-06-03T01:38:48+00:00 2026-06-03T01:38:48+00:00

I’m not sure how to phrase my question, so I’ll just post my code

  • 0

I’m not sure how to phrase my question, so I’ll just post my code and explain what I’m trying to do:

function getNewElement(tagName, className, idName, text){
    var newElement = document.createElement(tagName);
    newElement.className = className;
    newElement.id = idName;
    newElement.innerHTML = text;

    return newElement;
}

If I call

getNewElement("div", "meow", "meow1", getNewElement("span","meow", "meow2", "blahblahblah"));

I just get

<div id="meow1" class="meow">[object HTMLSpanElement]</div>

So my question is, how would I write this to return a string with out converting (potentially expensive operation?) or ghetto patching with strings.

Update:
ghetto patch version:

function getNewElement(tagName, className, idName, text){
    return '<' + tagName + ' class=' + className + ' id=' + idName + '>' + text + '</' + tagName + '>';     
}

Achieves the functionality I wanted, but I feel like it’s not that elegant.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-03T01:38:50+00:00Added an answer on June 3, 2026 at 1:38 am

    Not sure, but if you want the contents of #meow2 in the new element #meow1, using the statement as you do, this would be a solution:

    function getNewElement(tagName, className, idName, contents){
        var newElement = document.createElement(tagName);
        newElement.className = className;
        newElement.id = idName;
        newElement.innerHTML = 
              typeof contents === 'string' ? contents : contents.innerHTML;
        return newElement;
    }
    

    now

    getNewElement("div", "meow", "meow1", 
                  getNewElement("span","meow", "meow2", "blahblahblah"));
    

    would create a new element #meow1, with the content of a newly created element #meow2. Appended somewhere in the document it would look like:

    <div class="meow" id="meow1">blahblahblah</div>
    

    Otherwise, if you want #meow2 to be a child of #meow1, this would be a solution:

    function getNewElement(tagName, className, idName, contents){
        var newElement = document.createElement(tagName);
        newElement.className = className;
        newElement.id = idName;
        if (typeof contents === 'string'){
          newElement.innerHTML = contents;
        } else {
          newElement.appendChild(contents);
        }
        return newElement;
    }
    

    Now if you would do:

    document.body.appendChild(
         getNewElement("div", "meow", "meow1", 
                       getNewElement("span","meow", "meow2", "blahblahblah"))
    );
    

    this would be the result:

     <div class="meow" id="meow1">
      <span class="meow" id="meow2">blahblahblah</span>
     </div>
    
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