Reputation: 3531
What is the difference between innerHTML
, innerText
and value
in JavaScript?
Upvotes: 348
Views: 407898
Reputation: 2651
1)innerHtml
2)innerText
3)textContent
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1349
@rule:
innerHTML
write: whatever String you write to the ele.innerHTML
, ele
(the code of the element in the html file) will be exactly same as it is written in the String.
read : whatever you read from the ele.innerHTML
to a String, the String will be exactly same as it is in ele
(the html file).
.innerHTML
will not make any modification for your read/writeinnerText
write: when you write a String to the ele.innerText
, any html reserved special character
in the String will be encoded into html format first, then stored into the ele
.
<p>
in your String will become <p>
in the ele
read : when you read from the ele.innerText
to a String,
any html reserved special character
in the ele
will be decoded back into a readable text format,
<p>
in the ele
will become back into <p>
in your Stringany (valid) html tag
in the ele
will be removed -- so it becomes "plain text"
if <em>you</em> can
in the ele
will become if you can
in your Stringabout invalid html tag
if there is an invalid html tag
originally in the ele
(the html code), and you read from.innerText
, how does the tag gets removed?
-- this ("if there is an invalid html tag
originally") should not (is not possible to) happen
but its possible that you write an invalid html tag
by .innerHTML
(in raw) into ele
-- then, this may be auto fixed by the browser.
dont take (-interpret) this as step [1.] [2.] with an order -- no, take it as step [1.] [2.] are executed at the same time
-- I mean, if the decoded characters in [1.] will form a new tag after the conversion, [2.] does not remove it
(-- cuz [2.] considers what characters are in the ele
during the conversion, not the characters they become into after the conversion)
then stored into the String.
(^ this contains much more explanations in comments of the js file, + output in console.log
below is a simplified view, with some output.
(try out the code yourself, also there is no guarantee that my explanations are 100% correct.))
<p id="mainContent">This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.</p>
<p id="htmlWrite"></p>
<p id="textWrite"></p>
// > @basic (simple)
// read
var ele_mainContent = document.getElementById('mainContent');
alert(ele_mainContent.innerHTML); // This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading. // >" + => `.innerHTML` will **not make any modification** for your read/write
alert(ele_mainContent.innerText); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading. // >" 2. any (valid) `html tag` in the `ele` will be **removed** -- so it becomes "plain text"
// write
var str_WriteOutput = "Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output.";
var ele_htmlWrite = document.getElementById('htmlWrite');
var ele_textWrite = document.getElementById('textWrite');
ele_htmlWrite.innerHTML = str_WriteOutput;
ele_textWrite.innerText = str_WriteOutput;
alert(ele_htmlWrite.innerHTML); // Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output. // >" + => `.innerHTML` will **not make any modification** for your read/write
alert(ele_htmlWrite.innerText); // Write this sentence to the output. // >" 2. any (valid) `html tag` in the `ele` will be **removed** -- so it becomes "plain text"
alert(ele_textWrite.innerHTML); // Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output. // >" any `html reserved special character` in the String will be **encoded** into html format first
alert(ele_textWrite.innerText); // Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output. // >" 1. any `html reserved special character` in the `ele` will be **decoded** back into a readable text format,
// > @basic (more)
// write - with html encoded char
var str_WriteOutput_encodedChar = "What if you have <strong>encoded</strong> char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?";
var ele_htmlWrite_encodedChar = document.getElementById('htmlWrite_encodedChar');
var ele_textWrite_encodedChar = document.getElementById('textWrite_encodedChar');
ele_htmlWrite_encodedChar.innerHTML = str_WriteOutput_encodedChar;
ele_textWrite_encodedChar.innerText = str_WriteOutput_encodedChar;
alert(ele_htmlWrite_encodedChar.innerHTML); // What if you have <strong>encoded</strong> char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?
alert(ele_htmlWrite_encodedChar.innerText); // What if you have <strong>encoded</strong> char in the sentence?
alert(ele_textWrite_encodedChar.innerHTML); // What if you have &lt;strong&gt;encoded&lt;/strong&gt; char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?
alert(ele_textWrite_encodedChar.innerText); // What if you have <strong>encoded</strong> char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?
// > @note-advance: read then write
var ele__htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite = document.getElementById('htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite');
var ele__htmlRead_Then_textWrite = document.getElementById('htmlRead_Then_textWrite');
var ele__textRead_Then_htmlWrite = document.getElementById('textRead_Then_htmlWrite');
var ele__textRead_Then_textWrite = document.getElementById('textRead_Then_textWrite');
ele__htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerHTML = ele_mainContent.innerHTML;
ele__htmlRead_Then_textWrite.innerText = ele_mainContent.innerHTML;
ele__textRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerHTML = ele_mainContent.innerText;
ele__textRead_Then_textWrite.innerText = ele_mainContent.innerText;
alert(ele__htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerHTML); // This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerText); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__htmlRead_Then_textWrite.innerHTML); // This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__htmlRead_Then_textWrite.innerText); // This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__textRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerHTML); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__textRead_Then_htmlWrite.innerText); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__textRead_Then_textWrite.innerHTML); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading.
alert(ele__textRead_Then_textWrite.innerText); // This is a sample sentennce for Reading.
// the parsed html after js is executed
/*
<html><head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Test</title>
</head>
<body>
<p id="mainContent">This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.</p>
<p id="htmlWrite">Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output.</p>
<p id="textWrite">Write <strong>this</strong> sentence to the output.</p>
<!-- P2 -->
<p id="htmlWrite_encodedChar">What if you have <strong>encoded</strong> char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?</p>
<p id="textWrite_encodedChar">What if you have &lt;strong&gt;encoded&lt;/strong&gt; char in <strong>the</strong> sentence?</p>
<!-- P3 @note: -->
<p id="htmlRead_Then_htmlWrite">This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.</p>
<p id="htmlRead_Then_textWrite">This is a <strong>sample</strong> sentennce for Reading.</p>
<p id="textRead_Then_htmlWrite">This is a sample sentennce for Reading.</p>
<p id="textRead_Then_textWrite">This is a sample sentennce for Reading.</p>
</body></html>
*/
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 36
innerhtml will apply html codes
innertext will put content as text so if you have html tags it will show as text only
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 446
innerText
property sets or returns the text content as plain text of the specified node, and all its descendants, whereas the innerHTML
property gets and sets the plain text or HTML contents in the elements. Unlike innerText
, innerHTML
lets you work with HTML rich text and doesn’t automatically encode and decode text.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1619
To add to the list, innerText
will keep your text-transform
, innerHTML
wont.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 3361
Both innerText
and innerHTML
return internal part of an HTML element.
The only difference between innerText
and innerHTML
is that: innerText
return HTML element (entire code) as a string and display HTML element on the screen (as HTML code), while innerHTML
return only text content of the HTML element.
Look at the example below to understand better. Run the code below.
const ourstring = 'My name is <b class="name">Satish chandra Gupta</b>.';
document.getElementById('innertext').innerText = ourstring;
document.getElementById('innerhtml').innerHTML = ourstring;
.name {
color:red;
}
<p><b>Inner text below. It inject string as it is into the element.</b></p>
<p id="innertext"></p>
<br>
<p><b>Inner html below. It renders the string into the element and treat as part of html document.</b></p>
<p id="innerhtml"></p>
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 1112
The innerText
property returns the actual text value of an html element while the innerHTML
returns the HTML content
. Example below:
var element = document.getElementById('hello');
element.innerText = '<strong> hello world </strong>';
console.log('The innerText property will not parse the html tags as html tags but as normal text:\n' + element.innerText);
console.log('The innerHTML element property will encode the html tags found inside the text of the element:\n' + element.innerHTML);
element.innerHTML = '<strong> hello world </strong>';
console.log('The <strong> tag we put above has been parsed using the innerHTML property so the .innerText will not show them \n ' + element.innerText);
console.log(element.innerHTML);
<p id="hello"> Hello world
</p>
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 7416
InnerText
will only return the text value of the page with each element on a newline in plain text, while innerHTML
will return the HTML content of everything inside the body
tag, and childNodes
will return a list of nodes, as the name suggests.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 291
In simple words:
innerText
will show the value as is and ignores any HTML
formatting which may
be included.innerHTML
will show the value and apply any HTML
formatting.Upvotes: 17
Reputation: 7552
In terms of MutationObservers
, setting innerHTML
generates a childList
mutation due to the browsers removing the node and then adding a new node with the value of innerHTML
.
If you set innerText
, a characterData
mutation is generated.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1206
InnerText
property html-encodes the content, turning <p>
to <p>
, etc. If you want to insert HTML tags you need to use InnerHTML
.
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 2117
Unlike innerText
, though, innerHTML
lets you work with HTML rich text and doesn't automatically encode and decode text. In other words, innerText
retrieves and sets the content of the tag as plain text, whereas innerHTML
retrieves and sets the content in HTML format.
Upvotes: 195
Reputation: 33517
The examples below refer to the following HTML snippet:
<div id="test">
Warning: This element contains <code>code</code> and <strong>strong language</strong>.
</div>
The node will be referenced by the following JavaScript:
var x = document.getElementById('test');
element.innerHTML
Sets or gets the HTML syntax describing the element's descendants
x.innerHTML
// => "
// => Warning: This element contains <code>code</code> and <strong>strong language</strong>.
// => "
This is part of the W3C's DOM Parsing and Serialization Specification. Note it's a property of Element
objects.
node.innerText
Sets or gets the text between the start and end tags of the object
x.innerText
// => "Warning: This element contains code and strong language."
innerText
was introduced by Microsoft and was for a while unsupported by Firefox. In August of 2016, innerText
was adopted by the WHATWG and was added to Firefox in v45.innerText
gives you a style-aware, representation of the text that tries to match what's rendered in by the browser this means:
innerText
applies text-transform
and white-space
rulesinnerText
trims white space between lines and adds line breaks between itemsinnerText
will not return text for invisible itemsinnerText
will return textContent
for elements that are never rendered like <style />
and ` Node
elements
node.textContent
Gets or sets the text content of a node and its descendants.
x.textContent
// => "
// => Warning: This element contains code and strong language.
// => "
While this is a W3C standard, it is not supported by IE < 9.
Node
elements
node.value
This one depends on the element that you've targeted. For the above example, x
returns an HTMLDivElement object, which does not have a value
property defined.
x.value // => null
Input tags (<input />
), for example, do define a value
property, which refers to the "current value in the control".
<input id="example-input" type="text" value="default" />
<script>
document.getElementById('example-input').value //=> "default"
// User changes input to "something"
document.getElementById('example-input').value //=> "something"
</script>
From the docs:
Note: for certain input types the returned value might not match the value the user has entered. For example, if the user enters a non-numeric value into an
<input type="number">
, the returned value might be an empty string instead.
Here's an example which shows the output for the HTML presented above:
var properties = ['innerHTML', 'innerText', 'textContent', 'value'];
// Writes to textarea#output and console
function log(obj) {
console.log(obj);
var currValue = document.getElementById('output').value;
document.getElementById('output').value = (currValue ? currValue + '\n' : '') + obj;
}
// Logs property as [propName]value[/propertyName]
function logProperty(obj, property) {
var value = obj[property];
log('[' + property + ']' + value + '[/' + property + ']');
}
// Main
log('=============== ' + properties.join(' ') + ' ===============');
for (var i = 0; i < properties.length; i++) {
logProperty(document.getElementById('test'), properties[i]);
}
<div id="test">
Warning: This element contains <code>code</code> and <strong>strong language</strong>.
</div>
<textarea id="output" rows="12" cols="80" style="font-family: monospace;"></textarea>
Upvotes: 316
Reputation: 677
var element = document.getElementById("main");
var values = element.childNodes[1].innerText;
alert('the value is:' + values);
To further refine it and retrieve the value Alec for example, use another .childNodes[1]
var element = document.getElementById("main");
var values = element.childNodes[1].childNodes[1].innerText;
alert('the value is:' + values);
Upvotes: 3