const style = document.createElement("style")
style.textContent = "h1 { background-color: red; }"
document.head.appendChild(style)
The Modern & Easy Way
The code above is the gist of it; continue reading if you want to know the reasoning.
Why another answer? The accepted answer is old and includes redundant code for outdated browsers like the Internet Explorer. Other answers are unnecessarily complex or use properties like .innerHTML
that allow for cross-site scripting attacks.
The type
property is not needed
Most of the anwsers set the type
property like so: style.type = "text/css"
. Setting this property is not necessary unless you need to support older browsers.
According to <style>: The Style Information element - HTML | MDN, the type
attribute is optional and defaults to text/css
:
type
This attribute defines the styling language as a MIME type (charset should not be specified). This attribute is optional and defaults to text/css
if it is not specified; values other than the empty string or text/css
are not used. Note: There is very little reason to include this attribute in modern web documents.
Adding the CSS
To add the CSS, use .textContent
as it is safer and faster than alternative methods. Opposite to .innerHTML
, it does not parse HTML and can therefore prevent cross-site scripting attacks.
Another similar property, .innerText
, is like .textContent
but takes CSS styles into account and represents only the "rendered" text content. As we are not interested in "rendered"-only content we prefer .textContent
.
What does setting .textContent
do?
Setting the .textContent
property removes all the node's (element's) children and replaces them with the given string value.
Where to place the element?
The style element should be included in the head: "The <style>
element must be included inside the <head>
of the document. ...". [<style> ... | MDN]
To get the head use document.head
as it has been supported by all major browsers for a long time already so there is no need for other fallbacks.