reading the spec it sounds like setting textContent will destroy the contents of the node and replace it with whatever you set it to. So doing both will just undo the effect of setting .innerHTML
i'd go with textContent, because it sounds like it marks it as character data, and hopefully won't start trying to interpret things like & as weird symbols ( style)
Is there any chance you could get this script that you're trying to run served as text/javascript from your server so you can just put it as the src of the script tag?
@jAndy: I think I chose the wrong word when I said "differently". Script elements don't contain HTML, so nothing should be encoded when fetching the contents via innerHTML
Hi,
I know that we can delay the url redirection easily with plain javascirpt below,
setTimeout(function(){ document.location = 'http://stackoverflow.com/';}, 2000 );
what if I want to use jquery's delay()?
$(window.location).delay(4000).attr('href', 'http://stackoverflow.com/');// fail to...
@AndyE: IE6,7,8 screw up on innerHTML, but as you mentioned, work fine with .text. The funny part is that the latest official release of chrome, firefox and safari also work fine on .text
@NickCraver: that is just an option of my multipart xhr script loader. scripts gets either eval'ed (using native eval obv) or are inserted into the dom by script tag insertion which then puts the javascript code into those
Like most of jQuery's getter overloads, val() returns only the first item's value. You could use map() and join the resulting array:
$(function() {
var value = $('input:radio:checked').map(function() {
return this.value;
}).get().join(" "); // You could join with a comma if you...
Yeah i'm trying to abuse it now. Wondering if there is a way to override the base Object.toString method to return a unique string per object created >.>