Properties


innerText Property

Sets or retrieves the text between the start and end tags of the object.

Syntax

HTMLN/A
Scripting[ sTxt = ] object.innerText

Possible Values

sTxtString that specifies or receives the text between the start and end tags.

The property is read/write. The property has no default value.

DHTML expressions can be used in place of the preceding value(s). As of Internet Explorer 8, expressions are not supported in IE8 mode. For more information, see About Dynamic Properties.

Remarks

The innerText property is valid for block elements only. By definition, elements that do not have both an opening and closing tag cannot have an innerText property.

The innerText property is read-only on the html, table, tBody, tFoot, tHead, and tr objects.

When the innerText property is set, the given string completely replaces the existing content of the object.

security note Security Alert   Use the innerText to safely add dynamic text to a Web page. Unlike other properties, innerText does not execute script when inserting text into the Document Object Model (DOM) of a Web page.

You can set this property only after the onload event fires on the window. When dynamically creating a tag using TextRange, innerHTML, or outerHTML, use Microsoft JScript to create new events to handle the newly formed tags. Microsoft Visual Basic Scripting Edition (VBScript) is not supported.

You can change the value of the title element using the document.title property.

To change the contents of the table, tFoot, tHead, and tr elements, use the table object model. For example, use the rowIndex property or the rows collection to retrieve a reference to a specific table row. You can add or delete rows using the insertRow and deleteRow methods. To retrieve a reference to a specific cell, use the cellIndex property or the cells collection. You can add or delete rows using the insertCell and deleteCell methods. To change the content of a particular cell, use the innerHTML property.

Example

This example uses the innerText property to replace an object's contents. The object surrounding the text is not replaced.

<P ID=oPara>Here's the text that will change.</P>
:
<BUTTON onclick="oPara.innerText='WOW! It changed!'">Change text</BUTTON>
<BUTTON onclick="oPara.innerText='And back again'">Reset</BUTTON>
This feature requires Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 or later. Click the following icon to install the latest version. Then reload this page to view the sample.

Standards Information

There is no public standard that applies to this property.

Applies To

A, ABBR, ACRONYM, ADDRESS, B, BDO, BIG, BLOCKQUOTE, BODY, BUTTON, CAPTION, CENTER, CITE, CODE, CUSTOM, DD, DEL, DFN, DIR, DIV, EM, FIELDSET, FONT, FORM, hn, HTML, I, IFRAME, INS, KBD, LABEL, LEGEND, LI, LISTING, MAP, MARQUEE, MENU, nextID, NOBR, OL, OPTION, P, PLAINTEXT, PRE, Q, RT, RUBY, S, SAMP, SCRIPT, SELECT, SMALL, SPAN, STRIKE, STRONG, SUB, SUP, TABLE, TBODY, TD, TEXTAREA, TFOOT, TH, THEAD, TITLE, TR, TT, U, UL, VAR, XMP, Element Constructor

See Also

insertAdjacentText
Tags :


Community Content

Mr. Raymond Kenneth Petry
unsymmetric - edit v. replace() - linebreak
Range.text=(rtf/doc clipBoard) creates <BR> for linebreak, and <P> for double linebreaks, in innerText ... Likewise contentEditable Enter creates <P> and Shift-Enter creates <BR>.

However, innerText.replace(RegExp/gmi) doesn't maintain the <P> v. <BR> distinction.

So ... pre-replace <\/?P> with <BR> to get <BR><BR> as a simulated maintenance.
Tags :

thelem
avoid document.all
This example uses IE4's "document.all" syntax, which should be considered deprecated.

A more standards compliant example would be:

<P ID="oPara">Here's the text that will change.</P>
:
<BUTTON onclick="document.getElementById('oPara').innerText='WOW! It changed!'">Change text</BUTTON>
<BUTTON onclick="document.getElementById('oPara')
.innerText='And back again'">Reset</BUTTON>

Tags : contentbug

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