However, innerHTML has a problem in
Internet Explorer.
The HTML standard requires a
transformation on display of content.
All kinds and amounts of adjacent
whitespace are collapsed into a single
space. This is a good thing - just as
an example, it allows me to add a lot
of line breaks into this source file
without having to worry about weird
line breaks in the displayed text.
Internet Explorer applies these
transformations on assignment to the
innerHTML property. This seems like a
good idea: it saves a little time
during display, because if the
in-memory representation is already
normalized, then the browser doesn't
have to normalize whenever it needs to
display the text.
There are exceptions to the
normalization rule, though. Notably,
these are the <textarea> element, the
<pre> element and, in CSS-aware
browsers, elements with any value but
normal for the white-space property.
Internet Explorer does not respect
these special cases. The third makes
their optimization a bad idea, because
white-space might change at runtime,
for example through the DOM. In any
case, Internet Explorer will normalize
all assignments to the innerHTML
property, thus causing the effect
demonstrated below.
This text fills the textarea at page
load. This, too, contains line breaks
and multiple spaces. Formatting is
preserved here as well, except that
the UA may break lines.
it all magically works.