HTMLElement.dataset
The dataset
read-only property
of the HTMLElement
interface provides read/write access to custom data attributes
(data-*
) on elements. It exposes a map of strings
(DOMStringMap
) with an entry for each data-*
attribute.
Note: The dataset
property itself can be read, but not directly written.
Instead, all writes must be to the individual properties within the
dataset
, which in turn represent the data attributes.
An HTML data-*
attribute and its corresponding DOM
dataset.property
modify their shared name according to where
they are read or written:
- In HTML
-
The attribute name begins with
data-
. It can contain only letters, numbers, dashes (-
), periods (.
), colons (:
), and underscores (_
). Any ASCII capital letters (A
toZ
) are converted to lowercase. - In JavaScript
-
The property name of a custom data attribute is the same as the HTML attribute without the
data-
prefix, and removes single dashes (-
) for when to capitalize the property's "camelCased" name.
In addition to the information below, you'll find a how-to guide for using HTML data attributes in our article Using data attributes.
Name conversion
dash-style
tocamelCase
conversion-
A custom data attribute name is transformed to a key for the
DOMStringMap
entry by the following:-
Lowercase all ASCII capital letters (
A
toZ
); - Remove the prefix
data-
(including the dash); -
For any dash (
U+002D
) followed by an ASCII lowercase lettera
toz
, remove the dash and uppercase the letter; - Other characters (including other dashes) are left unchanged.
-
Lowercase all ASCII capital letters (
camelCase
todash-style
conversion-
The opposite transformation, which maps a key to an attribute name, uses the following:
-
Restriction: Before transformation, a dash must not be
immediately followed by an ASCII lowercase letter
a
toz
; - Add the
data-
prefix; -
Add a dash before any ASCII uppercase letter
A
toZ
, then lowercase the letter; - Other characters are left unchanged.
-
Restriction: Before transformation, a dash must not be
immediately followed by an ASCII lowercase letter
For example, a data-abc-def
attribute corresponds to
dataset.abcDef
.
Accessing values
-
Attributes can be set and read by the camelCase name/key as an object property of
the dataset:
element.dataset.keyname
-
Attributes can also be set and read using bracket syntax:
element.dataset['keyname']
-
The
in
operator can check if a given attribute exists:'keyname' in element.dataset
Setting values
-
When the attribute is set, its value is always converted to a string.
For example:
element.dataset.example = null
is converted intodata-example="null"
. - To remove an attribute, you can use the
delete
operator:delete element.dataset.keyname
Value
A DOMStringMap
.
Examples
<div id="user" data-id="1234567890" data-user="johndoe" data-date-of-birth>John Doe</div>
const el = document.querySelector('#user');
// el.id === 'user'
// el.dataset.id === '1234567890'
// el.dataset.user === 'johndoe'
// el.dataset.dateOfBirth === ''
// set a data attribute
el.dataset.dateOfBirth = '1960-10-03';
// Result on JS: el.dataset.dateOfBirth === '1960-10-03'
// Result on HTML: <div id="user" data-id="1234567890" data-user="johndoe" data-date-of-birth="1960-10-03">John Doe</div>
delete el.dataset.dateOfBirth;
// Result on JS: el.dataset.dateOfBirth === undefined
// Result on HTML: <div id="user" data-id="1234567890" data-user="johndoe">John Doe</div>
if ('someDataAttr' in el.dataset === false) {
el.dataset.someDataAttr = 'mydata';
// Result on JS: 'someDataAttr' in el.dataset === true
// Result on HTML: <div id="user" data-id="1234567890" data-user="johndoe" data-some-data-attr = "mydata">John Doe</div>
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTML Standard # dom-dataset-dev |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
-
The HTML
data-*
class of global attributes. - Using data attributes
Element.getAttribute()
andElement.setAttribute()