In the first example you're not accessing to the style attribute, but to the style property. The property's value can be anything, in case of the style property is an object. In the second example you're accessing to the style attribute of the tag. The attribute's value can be only string.
In case of some attributes there is a mapping between them. So if you set an attribute style on a HTML node, your style property is updated and your style is applied. However, this is not always true: a well known bug in some versions of IE (at least till IE7) is that sort of mapping is broken, so set an attribute is not reflected to the property.
So, if you want set an attribute on a HTML node, you have to use the second one. But if you want to access to the property of your object that represent a HTML node, you have to use the first one.
In case of the style, the first one is strongly recommended.
To make it clear with an example (in modern browsers):
document.body.style.border = "1px solid red";
console.log(document.body.style); // [object CSSStyleDeclaration]
console.log(document.body.getAttribute("style")); // "border: 1px solid red;"
document.getElementById('myId')['style']. afaik, it has similar reason for usinggetAttribute()as @gwynhowell explained. – Joseph the Dreamer Apr 21 '12 at 10:55square bracket notation, as opposite to thedot notation. See: developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Guide/Working_with_Objects – ZER0 Apr 21 '12 at 11:14