Selection: setBaseAndExtent() method

The setBaseAndExtent() method of the Selection interface sets the selection to be a range including all or parts of two specified DOM nodes, and any content located between them.

Syntax

js
setBaseAndExtent(anchorNode, anchorOffset, focusNode, focusOffset)

Parameters

anchorNode

The node at the start of the selection.

anchorOffset

The number of child nodes from the start of the anchor node that should be excluded from the selection. So for example, if the value is 0 the whole node is included. If the value is 1, the whole node minus the first child node is included. And so on.

If anchorNode is a Text node, the offset refers to the number of characters from the start of the Node.textContent that should be excluded from the selection.

focusNode

The node at the end of the selection.

focusOffset

The number of child nodes from the start of the focus node that should be included in the selection. So for example, if the value is 0 the whole node is excluded. If the value is 1, the first child node is included. And so on.

If focusNode is a Text node, the offset refers to the number of characters from the start of the Node.textContent that should be included in the selection.

Note: If the focus position appears before the anchor position in the document, the direction of the selection is reversed — the caret is placed at the beginning of the text rather the end, which matters for any keyboard command that might follow. For example, Shift + ➡︎ would cause the selection to narrow from the beginning rather than grow at the end.

Return value

None (undefined).

Exceptions

IndexSizeError DOMException

Thrown if anchorOffset is larger than the number of child nodes inside anchorNode, or if focusOffset is larger than the number of child nodes inside focusNode.

Examples

In this example, we have two paragraphs containing spans, each one containing a single word. The first one is set as the anchorNode and the second is set as the focusNode. We also have an additional paragraph that sits in between the two nodes.

Next, we have two form inputs that allow you to set the anchorOffset and focusOffset — they both have a default value of 0.

We also have a button that when pressed invokes a function that runs the setBaseAndExtent() method with the specified offsets, and copies the selection into the output paragraph at the very bottom of the HTML.

html
<h1>setBaseAndExtent example</h1>
<div>
  <p class="one">
    <span>Fish</span><span>Dog</span><span>Cat</span><span>Bird</span>
  </p>
  <p>MIDDLE</p>
  <p class="two">
    <span>Car</span><span>Bike</span><span>Boat</span><span>Plane</span>
  </p>
</div>

<div>
  <p>
    <label for="aOffset">Anchor offset</label>
    <input id="aOffset" name="aOffset" type="number" value="0" />
  </p>
  <p>
    <label for="fOffset">Focus offset</label>
    <input id="fOffset" name="fOffset" type="number" value="0" />
  </p>
  <p><button>Capture selection</button></p>
</div>

<p><strong>Output</strong>: <span class="output"></span></p>

Note: There is intentionally no whitespace between the <p class="one"> and <p class="two"> start tags and the <span> start tags which follow them — to avoid the presence of text nodes that would affect the number of child nodes expected. (Even though those text nodes would be whitespace-only, they would still be additional child nodes; find out more from the Node.firstChild example).

The JavaScript looks like so:

js
const one = document.querySelector(".one");
const two = document.querySelector(".two");

const aOffset = document.getElementById("aOffset");
const fOffset = document.getElementById("fOffset");

const button = document.querySelector("button");

const output = document.querySelector(".output");

let selection;

button.onclick = () => {
  try {
    selection = document.getSelection();
    selection.setBaseAndExtent(one, aOffset.value, two, fOffset.value);
    const text = selection.toString();
    output.textContent = text;
  } catch (e) {
    output.textContent = e.message;
  }
};

Play with the live example below, setting different offset values to see how this affects the selection.

Note: You can find this example on GitHub (see it live also.)

Specifications

Specification
Selection API
# dom-selection-setbaseandextent

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also