What is the DOM?

The DOM is an application programming interface that is linked to HTML, XHTML, or XML documents and treats these similar to a tree where each node in the tree represents a part of the document.

In simple words, the DOM can be compared to a tree where there is a root node, intermediate nodes, and leaf nodes.

The root node has no parent; the intermediate nodes have a parent, one or more siblings, and one or more children. This is a very important concept and will help at the time of creating relative or customized XPaths, which we will see in a later part of the chapter.

Shown here is a sample DOM:

In the preceding diagram, there are three leaf nodes, two intermediate nodes, and one root node. All of this is contained in a document. The question that arises next is: how do we get to a particular node in this tree structure? This is where terms such as XPath and CSS come into picture.

XPath stands for XML Path and is a querying language to query the nodes in a DOM.

CSS stands for Cascading Style Sheets and is a style sheet language used for describing the look and format of a document written in any markup language.

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