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I know document.write is considered bad practice; and I'm hoping to compile a list of reasons to submit to a 3rd party vendor as to why they shouldn't use document.write in implementations of their analytics code.

Please include your reason for claiming document.write as a bad practice below.

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17 Answers 17

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A few of the more serious problems:

  • document.write (henceforth DW) does not work in XHTML

  • DW does not directly modify the DOM, preventing further manipulation (trying to find evidence of this, but it's at best situational)

  • DW executed after the page has finished loading will overwrite the page, or write a new page, or not work

  • DW executes where encountered: it cannot inject at a given node point

  • DW is effectively writing serialised text which is not the way the DOM works conceptually, and is an easy way to create bugs (.innerHTML has the same problem)

Far better to use the safe and DOM friendly DOM manipulation methods

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    -1, it absolutely modifies the DOM. Everything else is fine. While I understand the urge to depend on structure and methods which can keep you from harm, this may be a case of throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
    – cgp
    Apr 29, 2009 at 15:50
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    FireBug is not a true representation of the DOM. It is mozilla's attempt to parse HTML into a DOM. You can have totally broken HTML look proper in the Firebug DOM view.
    – FlySwat
    Apr 29, 2009 at 16:17
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    The DOM is the data structure used to render the page and as such is the alpha and the omega of what the user sees on the page. You are correct that HTML != DOM, but it's immaterial to the question of whether or NOT the DOM is modified by DW. If DW didn't modify the DOM, you don't see the screen - that's true of all browsers and always will be as long as the DOM is what's used to render the page.
    – cgp
    Apr 29, 2009 at 16:41
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    "DW executes where encountered" - not always a disadvantage, indeed it could be considered an advantage for certain things, e.g., adding script elements (actually about the only thing I'd use DW for, and even then I'd think twice).
    – nnnnnn
    Dec 25, 2011 at 12:16
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    @RicardoRivaldo Yes, they do, if document.write is called after the document has finished loading
    – Izkata
    Sep 19, 2013 at 2:37
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There's actually nothing wrong with document.write, per se. The problem is that it's really easy to misuse it. Grossly, even.

In terms of vendors supplying analytics code (like Google Analytics) it's actually the easiest way for them to distribute such snippets

  1. It keeps the scripts small
  2. They don't have to worry about overriding already established onload events or including the necessary abstraction to add onload events safely
  3. It's extremely compatible

As long as you don't try to use it after the document has loaded, document.write is not inherently evil, in my humble opinion.

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    document.write does really horrible things to the html parsers, and is only "extremely compatible" in simple cases.
    – olliej
    Apr 29, 2009 at 19:24
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    Like the insertion of an analytics tag? That is, after all, part of the original question. And by extremely compatible, I mean for just raw browser support for the document.write method. Apr 29, 2009 at 19:28
  • Anything that works with the latest versions of Chrome / IE / Safari / Opera / FireFox is considered compatible.
    – Pacerier
    Oct 12, 2014 at 8:22
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    Overriding onload events? And what's addEventListener for?
    – m93a
    Feb 13, 2015 at 19:48
  • Chrome will not run document.write invocations that insert a script when certain conditions are met.
    – Flimm
    Jul 12, 2017 at 15:21
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It can block your page

document.write only works while the page is loading; If you call it after the page is done loading, it will overwrite the whole page.

This effectively means you have to call it from an inline script block - And that will prevent the browser from processing parts of the page that follow. Scripts and Images will not be downloaded until the writing block is finished.

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Another legitimate use of document.write comes from the HTML5 Boilerplate index.html example.

<!-- Grab Google CDN's jQuery, with a protocol relative URL; fall back to local if offline -->
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.6.3/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>window.jQuery || document.write('<script src="js/libs/jquery-1.6.3.min.js"><\/script>')</script>

I've also seen the same technique for using the json2.js JSON parse/stringify polyfill (needed by IE7 and below).

<script>window.JSON || document.write('<script src="json2.js"><\/script>')</script>
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    Not bad use here, but still "better" to use DOM manipulation functions -- even Google does it for Google Analytics. Snippet is here.
    – BMiner
    Jan 22, 2013 at 14:40
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    @BMiner if you insert a script element via DOM manipulation, is it loaded synchronously? Unless it is, it's not a replacement. Jun 5, 2013 at 10:41
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    @JanDvorak - Good point; when using DOM manipulations, browsers will generally load the script asynchronously. You can use the onload DOM event to determine when the asynchronously loaded script is available for use.
    – BMiner
    Jun 6, 2013 at 18:16
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    @JanDvorak It is loaded synchronously if it isn't external (doesn't have src). Otherwise it will be executed "as soon as possible", asynchronously.
    – Oriol
    Aug 14, 2016 at 23:51
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    This still can break, as Chrome will deliberately refuse to run document.write calls that insert <script> tags if the user is on a 2G connection. See developers.google.com/web/updates/2016/08/…
    – Flimm
    Jul 12, 2017 at 15:13
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Pro:

  • It's the easiest way to embed inline content from an external (to your host/domain) script.
  • You can overwrite the entire content in a frame/iframe. I used to use this technique a lot for menu/navigation pieces before more modern Ajax techniques were widely available (1998-2002).

Con:

  • It serializes the rendering engine to pause until said external script is loaded, which could take much longer than an internal script.
  • It is usually used in such a way that the script is placed within the content, which is considered bad-form.
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    There are more cons than that. For instance, Google Chrome will refuse to run document.write that creates <script> tag under certain circumstances. developers.google.com/web/updates/2016/08/…
    – Flimm
    Jul 12, 2017 at 15:14
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    @Flimm it's worth noting, your comment is over 8 years after my answer and this almost 3 years later. Yeah, there's other cons... and I'd be surprised if document.write itself doesn't go away... as well as possibly some other highly abused interfaces.
    – Tracker1
    Apr 16, 2020 at 1:32
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Here's my twopence worth, in general you shouldn't use document.write for heavy lifting, but there is one instance where it is definitely useful:

http://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2005/06/three_javascrip_1.html

I discovered this recently trying to create an AJAX slider gallery. I created two nested divs, and applied width/height and overflow: hidden to the outer <div> with JS. This was so that in the event that the browser had JS disabled, the div would float to accommodate the images in the gallery - some nice graceful degradation.

Thing is, as with the article above, this JS hijacking of the CSS didn't kick in until the page had loaded, causing a momentary flash as the div was loaded. So I needed to write a CSS rule, or include a sheet, as the page loaded.

Obviously, this won't work in XHTML, but since XHTML appears to be something of a dead duck (and renders as tag soup in IE) it might be worth re-evaluating your choice of DOCTYPE...

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It overwrites content on the page which is the most obvious reason but I wouldn't call it "bad".

It just doesn't have much use unless you're creating an entire document using JavaScript in which case you may start with document.write.

Even so, you aren't really leveraging the DOM when you use document.write--you are just dumping a blob of text into the document so I'd say it's bad form.

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    One clarification: document.write inserts contents on the page, it doesn't overwrite them. Apr 29, 2009 at 15:45
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    @Peter, it does overwrite the content if you call it after the document is loaded. I'm guessing that's what aleemb means. Apr 29, 2009 at 17:09
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    Are you suggesting that one should instead manually build the individual DOM nodes in code rather than just doing something like div.innerHTML = "<label for='MySelect'>Choose One</label><select id='MySelect'><option value='foo' selected=''>foo</option><option value='bar'>bar</option></select>";? That seems like it would produce a lot of unnecessary and less readable code. It's also the exact opposite of the approach John Resig and other JS developers advocate. Dec 26, 2012 at 8:25
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It breaks pages using XML rendering (like XHTML pages).

Best: some browser switch back to HTML rendering and everything works fine.

Probable: some browser disable the document.write() function in XML rendering mode.

Worst: some browser will fire an XML error whenever using the document.write() function.

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Off the top of my head:

  1. document.write needs to be used in the page load or body load. So if you want to use the script in any other time to update your page content document.write is pretty much useless.

  2. Technically document.write will only update HTML pages not XHTML/XML. IE seems to be pretty forgiving of this fact but other browsers will not be.

http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/2004/xhtml-faq#docwrite

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    IE is forgiving because it doesn't support XHTML. If/when they do, document.write will probably stop working (only in XHTML of course). Apr 29, 2009 at 17:12
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    XHTML is irrelevant on the web. Even pages with a strict XHTML doctype are not actually treated as XML in that regard, browser developers don't trust page authors that much.
    – RobG
    Oct 27, 2015 at 0:37
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Chrome may block document.write that inserts a script in certain cases. When this happens, it will display this warning in the console:

A Parser-blocking, cross-origin script, ..., is invoked via document.write. This may be blocked by the browser if the device has poor network connectivity.

References:

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Browser Violation

.write is considered a browser violation as it halts the parser from rendering the page. The parser receives the message that the document is being modified; hence, it gets blocked until JS has completed its process. Only at this time will the parser resume.

Performance

The biggest consequence of employing such a method is lowered performance. The browser will take longer to load page content. The adverse reaction on load time depends on what is being written to the document. You won't see much of a difference if you are adding a <p> tag to the DOM as opposed to passing an array of 50-some references to JavaScript libraries (something which I have seen in working code and resulted in an 11 second delay - of course, this also depends on your hardware).

All in all, it's best to steer clear of this method if you can help it.

For more info see Intervening against document.write()

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I don't think using document.write is a bad practice at all. In simple words it is like a high voltage for inexperienced people. If you use it the wrong way, you get cooked. There are many developers who have used this and other dangerous methods at least once, and they never really dig into their failures. Instead, when something goes wrong, they just bail out, and use something safer. Those are the ones who make such statements about what is considered a "Bad Practice".

It's like formatting a hard drive, when you need to delete only a few files and then saying "formatting drive is a bad practice".

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Based on analysis done by Google-Chrome Dev Tools' Lighthouse Audit,

For users on slow connections, external scripts dynamically injected via document.write() can delay page load by tens of seconds.

enter image description here

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One can think of document.write() (and .innerHTML) as evaluating a source code string. This can be very handy for many applications. For example if you get HTML code as a string from some source, it is handy to just "evaluate" it.

In the context of Lisp, DOM manipulation would be like manipulating a list structure, e.g. create the list (orange) by doing:

(cons 'orange '())

And document.write() would be like evaluating a string, e.g. create a list by evaluating a source code string like this:

(eval-string "(cons 'orange '())")

Lisp also has the very useful ability to create code using list manipulation (like using the "DOM style" to create a JS parse tree). This means you can build up a list structure using the "DOM style", rather than the "string style", and then run that code, e.g. like this:

(eval '(cons 'orange '()))

If you implement coding tools, like simple live editors, it is very handy to have the ability to quickly evaluate a string, for example using document.write() or .innerHTML. Lisp is ideal in this sense, but you can do very cool stuff also in JS, and many people are doing that, like http://jsbin.com/

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  • A simple reason why document.write is a bad practice is that you cannot come up with a scenario where you cannot find a better alternative.
  • Another reason is that you are dealing with strings instead of objects (it is very primitive).
  • It does only append to documents.
  • It has nothing of the beauty of for instance the MVC (Model-View-Controller) pattern.
  • It is a lot more powerful to present dynamic content with ajax+jQuery or angularJS.
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  • As for as your first bullet goes, how are you going to solve what @sunwukung describes in his answer above? I agree you could solve it with DOM manipulations, but as DOM manipulations go, it is hard to avoid FUOC at times without document.write. May 19, 2017 at 16:29
  • Is FUOC a problem anymore? Aug 18, 2018 at 7:56
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The disadvantages of document.write mainly depends on these 3 factors:

a) Implementation

The document.write() is mostly used to write content to the screen as soon as that content is needed. This means it happens anywhere, either in a JavaScript file or inside a script tag within an HTML file. With the script tag being placed anywhere within such an HTML file, it is a bad idea to have document.write() statements inside script blocks that are intertwined with HTML inside a web page.

b) Rendering

Well designed code in general will take any dynamically generated content, store it in memory, keep manipulating it as it passes through the code before it finally gets spit out to the screen. So to reiterate the last point in the preceding section, rendering content in-place may render faster than other content that may be relied upon, but it may not be available to the other code that in turn requires the content to be rendered for processing. To solve this dilemma we need to get rid of the document.write() and implement it the right way.

c) Impossible Manipulation

Once it's written it's done and over with. We cannot go back to manipulate it without tapping into the DOM.

-4

I think the biggest problem is that any elements written via document.write are added to the end of the page's elements. That's rarely the desired effect with modern page layouts and AJAX. (you have to keep in mind that the elements in the DOM are temporal, and when the script runs may affect its behavior).

It's much better to set a placeholder element on the page, and then manipulate it's innerHTML.

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    This is not true. document.write does not add the content to the end of the page like it's an append. They are written in place. Apr 29, 2009 at 15:35
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    @Peter Bailey, I know this is an old thread, but really this shouldn't be downvoted. whether it appends or not depends on whether document.write() runs inline while the page is loading. If it is called from a function after the page loads then the first document.write() will replace the entire body and subsequent calls will append to it.
    – Octopus
    Dec 17, 2014 at 5:53
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    @Octopus Yes, but that's circumstantial. It appends in that scenario only because there's a fresh document. It's still not accurate to say "document.write() appends." Yes, it's an old answer and an old downvote, but I still stand by it. Dec 18, 2014 at 14:03
  • Its fine. I spoke imprecisely. I would've edited it long ago, but there is a much better answer above. I would point out though that "written in place" is equally imprecise. Dec 18, 2014 at 20:40
  • document.write replaces the script tag after rendering. Jul 27, 2021 at 13:58

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