As any seasoned JavaScript developer knows, there are many (too many) ways to do the same thing. For example, say you have a text field as follows:
<form name="myForm">
<input type="text" name="foo" id="foo" />
There are many way to access this in JavaScript:
[1] document.forms[0].elements[0];
[2] document.myForm.foo;
[3] document.getElementById('foo');
[4] document.getElementById('myForm').foo;
... and so on ...
Methods [1] and [3] are well documented in the Mozilla Gecko documentation, but neither are ideal. [1] is just too general to be useful and [3] requires both an id and a name (assuming you will be posting the data to a server side language). Ideally, it would be best to have only an id attribute or a name attribute (having both is somewhat redundant, especially if the id isn't necessary for any css, and increases the likelihood of typos, etc).
[2] seems to be the most intuitive and it seems to be widely used, but I haven't seen it referenced in the Gecko documentation and I'm worried about both forwards compatibility and cross browser compatiblity (and of course I want to be as standards compliant as possible).
So what's best practice here? Can anyone point to something in the DOM documentation or W3C specification that could resolve this?
Note I am specifically interested in a non-library solution (jQuery/Prototype).
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