.clone()
Create a deep copy of the set of matched elements.
.clone(withDataAndEvents)🡢 jQuery
withDataAndEvents
| Boolean | Default: |
.clone(withDataAndEvents, deepWithDataAndEvents)🡢 jQuery
withDataAndEvents
| Boolean | Default: false . *In jQuery 1.5.0 the default value was incorrectly true ; it was changed back to false in 1.5.1 and up. |
deepWithDataAndEvents
| Boolean | Default: false ). |
The .clone()
method performs a deep copy of the set of matched elements, meaning that it copies the matched elements as well as all of their descendant elements and text nodes.
Note: For performance reasons, the dynamic state of certain form elements (e.g., user data typed into textarea
and user selections made to a select
) is not copied to the cloned elements. When cloning input
elements, the dynamic state of the element (e.g., user data typed into text inputs and user selections made to a checkbox) is retained in the cloned elements.
When used in conjunction with one of the insertion methods, .clone()
is a convenient way to duplicate elements on a page. Consider the following HTML:
<div class="container">
<div class="hello">Hello</div>
<div class="goodbye">Goodbye</div>
</div>
As shown in the discussion for .append()
, normally when an element is inserted somewhere in the DOM, it is moved from its old location. So, given the code:
$(".hello").appendTo(".goodbye");
The resulting DOM structure would be:
<div class="container">
<div class="goodbye">
Goodbye
<div class="hello">Hello</div>
</div>
</div>
To prevent this and instead create a copy of the element, you could write the following:
$(".hello").clone().appendTo(".goodbye");
This would produce:
<div class="container">
<div class="hello">Hello</div>
<div class="goodbye">
Goodbye
<div class="hello">Hello</div>
</div>
</div>
Note: When using the .clone()
method, you can modify the cloned elements or their contents before (re-)inserting them into the document.
Normally, any event handlers bound to the original element are not copied to the clone. The optional withDataAndEvents
parameter allows us to change this behavior, and to instead make copies of all of the event handlers as well, bound to the new copy of the element. As of jQuery 1.4, all element data (attached by the .data()
method) is also copied to the new copy.
However, objects and arrays within element data are not copied and will continue to be shared between the cloned element and the original element. To deep copy all data, copy each one manually:
// Original element with attached data
var $elem = $("#elem").data("arr", [1]),
$clone = $elem
.clone(true)
// Deep copy to prevent data sharing
.data("arr", $.extend([], $elem.data("arr")));
As of jQuery 1.5, withDataAndEvents
can be optionally enhanced with deepWithDataAndEvents
to copy the events and data for all children of the cloned element.
Note: Using .clone()
has the side-effect of producing elements with duplicate id
attributes, which are supposed to be unique. Where possible, it is recommended to avoid cloning elements with this attribute or using class
attributes as identifiers instead.
Clones all b elements (and selects the clones) and prepends them to all paragraphs.
<b>Hello</b>
<p>, how are you?</p>
$("b").clone().prependTo("p");