45

If I have a textarea block like so...

<textarea name="myTextArea" cols="100" rows="20" readonly=readonly>
.. text area content ...
</textarea>

How can I embed HTML formatted text inside this text block? If I can I had figured the following should work...

<textarea name="myTextArea" cols="100" rows="20" readonly=readonly>
<b>Hello how are you today?</b>
</textarea>

As an example. But that sentence does not show up as bold. Maybe I'm just trying to do something that can't be done?

10 Answers 10

34

I am pretty sure the answer is no -- cannot do it with a textarea.

From the MDN docs:

The HTML <textarea> element represents a multi-line plain-text editing control.

  • Permitted content Text
21

Is not possible with

<textarea> 

Use this:

<div contenteditable="true">
</div>
2
  • 3
    This allows to edit the content of a div but doesn't allow to display the content as rendered HTML. Try to type <b>aoba</b> there and it will not display as bold. Jan 26, 2018 at 12:32
  • It won't render on the fly (like a WYSIWYG editor might do), but you sure can do <div contenteditable="true">Something in <i>italic</i>.</div>
    – DarkTrick
    Jan 2, 2021 at 14:11
8

You are correct, it cannot be done.

According to MDN, "character data" is the only permitted content for a <textarea>.

As other answers have described, what you are looking for is a WYSIWYG editor, like CKEditor, TinyMCE, or Kendo's Editor.

This is beside the point, but interestingly, MDN lists some examples on their HTMLTextAreaElement page on how to enable dynamic adding of HTML tags around text in a <textarea> and how to enable autogrow behavior for a <textarea>.

7

You can do this (convert the "special" characters):

<textarea name="myTextArea" cols="100" rows="20" readonly=readonly>
&lt;b&gt;Hello how are you today?&lt;/b&gt;
</textarea>
2
  • Yeh that doesn't work for me. Thanks for the suggestion though.
    – Rob Segal
    Apr 6, 2010 at 13:42
  • 1
    Ah, I misunderstood your question then. I thought you wanted to see the HTML tags.
    – 37Stars
    Apr 6, 2010 at 14:39
4

Nope! If you validated that in an HTML document, you'd get an error along the lines of

document type does not allow element "b" here

What you might be looking for is a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get editor, which is actually an <iframe> which is making use of a JavaScript feature designMode. It's possible to find tutorials on how to create these (archive), but it's a much, much better idea to use an existing one, as for it to be really useful and usable takes a lot of work.

Take note that - if you were still interested in validation, which you should be if you're working with HTML - is that you won't be able to use a strict DOCTYPE declaration, as the WYSIWYG editor will be using an iframe.

3

You can try this too its simple and if you are using asp.net use lable contron in text area add this as

Text="&lt; stonename &gt;" 
"&lt";stonename"&gt";
2

You can not do that inside textarea but what you can do...you can use p tag and parse information to tag by JQuery. Something like this:

    var stringviewinfo ="aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<br>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<br>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<b>aaaaaaaa</b>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<br>aaaaaaaaaaa<font color=\"red\">AAAA</font>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<b>aaaaaaaaaaaaa<b>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<br>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa</br>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa";      
$('#viewinfo').html(stringviewinfo);
<p style="word-wrap: break-word;" id="viewinfo"></p>

I hope this will help.

2
  • In plain JavaScript: var stringviewinfo = "..."; document.getElementById("viewinfo").innerHTML = stringviewinfo;.
    – Ben J
    Mar 5, 2019 at 5:11
  • Note for people new to this: Always remember whenever you do something like this, if you are getting the HTML string from a user, they can choose any string they want, which might break your own HTML (especially if you save the string on a server, and so allow the user to choose arbitrary code that runs on other people's browsers, this can be a security risk). See Cross-site scripting. So you need to limit what the string is allowed to be, so it will behave as expected.
    – Ben J
    Mar 5, 2019 at 5:11
1

By now (8 years later) you know textarea is not the way to go.

If you happen to be using Vue.js, you can use a div with v-html to set the inner HTML

<template>
    <div name="myTextArea" cols="100" rows="20" readonly=readonly v-html="content" />
</template>

<script>
    export default {
        data() {
            return{
                content = "<b>Hello how are you today?</b>";
            }
    }
</script>
0

Here is the answer.

Use this function.

function br2nl(varTest) {
        return varTest.replace(/<br\s*\/?>/ig, "\r");
    }
-2

There is a very simple way you can achieve that.

First: Customize the <textarea> to accept and save special chars to DB

<textarea contenteditable="true" class="form-control" name="setting[header_code]"><?php echo set_value('setting[header_code]', html_entity_decode($item->header_code)) ?></textarea>

Second: extract and echo the saved data from DB

<?php echo html_entity_decode(config(nl2br('header_code')));?>

Hope it can help you.

Thanks

1
  • This question is about HTML, php is not relevant here. Encoding HTML characters is not what the question is asking about.
    – Jon P
    Jul 27, 2020 at 0:04

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