The read-only composed
property of the Event
interface returns a Boolean
which indicates whether or not the event will propagate across the shadow DOM boundary into the standard DOM.
Note: This property was formerly named scoped
.
var composed = Event.composed;
A Boolean
which is true
if the event will cross from the shadow DOM into the standard DOM after reaching the shadow root (that is, the first node in the shadow DOM in which the event began to propagate). All UA-dispatched UI events are composed (click/touch/mouseover/copy/paste, etc.) — most other types of events are not composed and so will return false
, for example synthetic events that have been created without their composed option being set to true
.
Propagation only occurs if the bubbles
property is also true
. However, capturing only composed events are also handled at host as if they were in AT_TARGET phase. You can determine the path the event will follow through the shadow root to the DOM root by calling composedPath()
.
If this value is false
, the shadow root will be the last node to be offered the event.
In our composed-composed-path example (see it live), we define two trivial custom elements, <open-shadow>
and <closed-shadow>
, both of which take the contents of their text attribute and insert them into the element's shadow DOM as the text content of a <p>
element. The only difference between the two is that their shadow roots are attached with their modes set to open
and closed
respectively.
The first definition looks like this, for example:
customElements.define('open-shadow', class extends HTMLElement { constructor() { super(); let pElem = document.createElement('p'); pElem.textContent = this.getAttribute('text'); let shadowRoot = this.attachShadow({mode: 'open'}) .appendChild(pElem); } });
We then insert one of each element into our page:
<open-shadow text="I have an open shadow root"></open-shadow> <closed-shadow text="I have a closed shadow root"></closed-shadow>
Then include a click event listener on the <html>
element:
document.querySelector('html').addEventListener('click',function(e) { console.log(e.composed); console.log(e.composedPath()); });
When you click on the <open-shadow>
element and then the <closed-shadow>
element, you'll notice two things. First, the composed
property returns true
beause the click
event is always able to propagate across shadow boundaries. Second, you'll notice a difference in the value of composedPath
for the two elements. The <open-shadow>
element's composed path is this:
Whereas the <closed-shadow>
element's composed path is a follows:
In the second case, the event listeners only propagate as far as the <closed-shadow>
element itself, but not to the nodes inside the shadow boundary.
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
DOM The definition of 'composed' in that specification. | Living Standard |
Desktop | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | |
Basic support | 53 | ? | 52 | ? | 40 | ? |
Mobile | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Android webview | Chrome for Android | Edge Mobile | Firefox for Android | Opera for Android | iOS Safari | Samsung Internet | |
Basic support | 53 | 53 | ? | 52 | 40 | ? | ? |
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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/Event/composed