Uncaught SyntaxError: Failed to execute 'querySelector' on 'Document'

Although this is valid in HTML, you can't use an ID starting with an integer in CSS selectors.

As pointed out, you can use getElementById instead, but you can also still achieve the same with a querySelector:

document.querySelector("[id='22']")

You are allowed to use IDs that start with a digit in your HTML5 documents:

The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not contain any space characters.

There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.

But querySelector method uses CSS3 selectors for querying the DOM and CSS3 doesn't support ID selectors that start with a digit:

In CSS, identifiers (including element names, classes, and IDs in selectors) can contain only the characters [a-zA-Z0-9] and ISO 10646 characters U+00A0 and higher, plus the hyphen (-) and the underscore (_); they cannot start with a digit, two hyphens, or a hyphen followed by a digit.

Use a value like b22 for the ID attribute and your code will work.

Since you want to select an element by ID you can also use .getElementById method:

document.getElementById('22')