This one was trivial.
As stated in spec (8.4 Parsing HTML fragments and 8.2.3.5 Other parsing state flags,) quote:
when using innerHTML
the browser will
Create a new Document node, and mark it as being an HTML document.
If there is a context element, and the Document of the context element is in quirks mode, then let the Document be in quirks mode.
Otherwise, if there is a context element, and the Document of the
context element is in limited-quirks mode, then let the Document be in
limited-quirks mode. Otherwise, leave the Document in no-quirks mode.
Create a new HTML parser, and associate it with the just created Document node.
...
and when parsing a <script>
inside
The scripting flag is set to "enabled" if scripting was enabled for
the Document with which the parser is associated when the parser was
created, and "disabled" otherwise.
The scripting flag can be enabled even when the parser was originally
created for the HTML fragment parsing algorithm, even though script
elements don't execute in that case.
So it won't be executed, as long as you inject it with innerHTML
.
And using innerHTML
will prevent the <script>
element created from being executed permanently.
As stated in spec (4.3.1 The script element,) quote:
Changing the src, type, charset, async, and defer attributes dynamically has no direct effect; these attribute are only used at specific times described below.
Concluding the described below is that, it only parse the src
attribute when injecting the <script>
to the document
(no matter which, including the temporary one created when using innerHTML
.)
So, as long as you want to inject a script to the document and make it executed, you have to use script = document.createElement('script')
.
Set its attributes like src
and type
, possibly the contents inside (by using script.appendChild(document.createTextNode(content))
), then append it to the document.body
.
$("bdoy")
is a typo, I guess..appendChild("wrapscript")
will not do what you're after. wrapscript there, is only a string (because you've wrapped it in quotes).