Ejemplo 1: JAVASCRIPT EVENT.TARGET
event.target returns the node that was targeted by the function.
This means you can do anything you would do with any other node like one
you'd get from document.getElementById
Ejemplo 2: javascript .target
// Make a list
const ul = document.createElement('ul');
document.body.appendChild(ul);
const li1 = document.createElement('li');
const li2 = document.createElement('li');
ul.appendChild(li1);
ul.appendChild(li2);
function hide(evt) {
// e.target refers to the clicked <li> element
// This is different than e.currentTarget, which would refer to the parent <ul> in this context
evt.target.style.visibility = 'hidden';
}
// Attach the listener to the list
// It will fire when each <li> is clicked
ul.addEventListener('click', hide, false);
Ejemplo 3: event.target javascript
const theTarget = someEvent.target;
Ejemplo 4: que es e.target en javascript
The target property gets the element on which the event originally occurred,
opposed to the currentTarget property, which always refers to the element
whose event listener triggered the event.
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