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In a web application I dynamically create a large and quite complex table with about 10,000 empty cells in a first step (some table cells will stay empty, some not). My first appoach used innerHtml with a no-break space to prevent empty cells from collapsing:

td.innerHtml = ' ';

But that was rather slow. Then I discovered that to set innerText is much faster than setting innerHtml. So I changed my code to

td.innerText = '\u00a0';

because td.innerText = ' ' just wrote the text " " in each cell. It seemed to work in Internet Explorer 11 but in Firefox the borders of the empty cells disappeared. But I do not see any difference if I inspect the cells (via Firebug or something) and compare them with my previous version.

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    Firefox does not support innerText, in favour of textContent
    – ndugger
    Oct 30, 2014 at 13:04
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    innerText is Microsoft's proprietary extensions, iirc. Oct 30, 2014 at 13:05
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    I'm not sure I understand what "collapsing" means, nor why this can't be solved much more efficiently with CSS.
    – Pointy
    Oct 30, 2014 at 13:11
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    Do not fix this with JS. Use empty-cells: show; in your CSS. Feb 3, 2017 at 10:01
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    empty-cells didn't work for me :o
    – csomakk
    May 3, 2020 at 10:59

1 Answer 1

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element.innerText is not a standard property. It was introduced by Microsoft into Internet Explorer, but no other browsers are guaranteed to support it (which is why you're seeing quirks).

Use element.textContent or rethink your approach. Generating a 10k empty cells table sounds like a very bad idea.

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    Chrome very well supports innerText. Just like it supports document.all... Oct 30, 2014 at 13:09
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    I never said that no other browser supports it, I said that no one guarantees support, because it's not standard. Oct 30, 2014 at 13:09
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    As old IE (e.g. IE9) have problems with textContent I had to use both methods. For cross-browser text setting see stackoverflow.com/questions/11646398/…
    – Sebastian
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:03
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    Nowadays innerText is widely support across all browsers. See caniuse.com/innertext Mar 22, 2021 at 5:06
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    My answer stands, stick to standards, avoid quirks. It's worth noting that back in '14, innerText was not a standard property, it was added to the standard much later to maintain compatibility. Mar 22, 2021 at 11:28

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