SVGAElement: interestForElement property
The interestForElement property of the SVGAElement interface gets or sets the target element of an interest invoker, in cases where the associated <a> element is specified as an interest invoker.
See Creating an interest invoker for more details.
Value
An Element object instance, or null if the associated <a> element does not have a target element set.
Examples
>Basic interestForElement usage
In this example, we use an SVG <a> element's interestForElement property to set its target element and then retrieve the target element's tagName. The tagName is then included in the <a> element's text content.
HTML
The markup contains an SVG <a> element with a <text> element, and the link text is included within the <text> element. There's also an HTML <div> element. We turn the <div> element into a popover by setting the popover attribute on it.
<svg>
<a href="#">
<text x="90" y="20" text-anchor="middle">A link</text>
</a>
</svg>
<div id="mypopover" popover>I am a <code><div></code> element.</div>
JavaScript
We get references to the <a>, <text>, and <div> elements in script. We then create the interest invoker-target relationship between the <a> and the <div> by setting the <a> element's interestForElement property equal to a reference to the <div>. We then update the <text> content to display the target element's tagName, retrieved via invoker.interestForElement.tagName.
const invoker = document.querySelector("a");
const invokerText = document.querySelector("text");
const popover = document.querySelector("div");
invoker.interestForElement = popover;
invokerText.textContent = `My target is a ${invoker.interestForElement.tagName} element`;
Result
The example renders like this:
Try showing interest in the link (for example, by hovering or focusing it) to make the <div> appear.