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MutationObserverInit.attributeFilter

The MutationObserverInit dictionary's optional attributeFilter property is an array of strings specifying the names of the attributes whose values are to be monitored for changes. If this property is specified, there's no need to also set attributes to true, as it's implied.

If the attributes permission is true but no attributeFilter is included in the options object, all attributes' values are watched for changes.

Syntax

var options = {
  attributeFilter: [ "list", "of", "attribute", "names" ]
}

Value

An array of DOMString objects, each specifying the name of one attribute whose value is to be monitored for changes. There is no default value.

If this property exists on the options object when the MutationObserver() constructor is used to create a new MutationObserver, attribute monitoring is enabled regardless of whether or not the attributes property is true.

Example

In this example, a Mutation Observer is set up to watch for changes to the status and username attributes in any elements contained within a subtree that displays the names of users in a chat room. This lets the code, for example, reflect changes to users' nicknames, or to mark them as away from keyboard (AFK) or offline.

function callback(mutationList) {
  mutationList.forEach(function(mutation) {
    switch(mutation.type) {
      case "attributes":
        switch(mutation.attributeName) {
          case "status":
            userStatusChanged(mutation.target.username, mutation.target.status);
            break;
          case "username":
            usernameChanged(mutation.oldValue, mutation.target.username);
            break;
        }
        break;
    }
  });
}

var userListElement = document.querySelector("#userlist");

var observer = new MutationObserver(callback);
observer.observe(userListElement, {
  attributeFilter: [ "status", "username" ],
  attributeOldValue: true,
  subtree: true
});

The callback() function—which will be passed into the observe() method when starting the observer, looks at each item in the list of MutationRecord objects. For any items representing an attribute change (which can be detected by the value of MutationRecord.type being "attributes"), we use the attribute's name, obtained using MutationRecord.attributeName, to identify the type of change that occurred and then dispatch to the appropriate handler function.

Note the use of MutationRecord.oldValue to get the previous value of the "username" property so we have that information when doing lookups in our local array of users.

When observe() is called, the specified options include both attributeFilter and subtree, so that we monitor the attribute values for all of the nodes contained within the subtree rooted at the node with the ID "userlist". The attributeOldValue option is set to true because we want the prior value of the changed attributes recorded and reported in the mutation records we receive.

Specifications

Browser compatibilityUpdate compatibility data on GitHub

Desktop
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Basic support 26
26
18 — 26
Prefixed
Prefixed Implemented with the vendor prefix: webkit
Yes 14 11 15 7
7
6 — 7
Prefixed
Prefixed Implemented with the vendor prefix: webkit
Mobile
Android webview Chrome for Android Edge Mobile Firefox for Android Opera for Android iOS Safari Samsung Internet
Basic support ? 26
26
18 — 26
Prefixed
Prefixed Implemented with the vendor prefix: webkit
? 14 15 7
7
6 — 7
Prefixed
Prefixed Implemented with the vendor prefix: webkit
?

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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/MutationObserverInit/attributeFilter