How can I insert new line/carriage returns into an element.textContent?
I know this question posted long time ago.
I had similar problem few days ago, passing value from web service in json
format and place it in table
cell
contentText
.
Because value is passed in format, for example, "text row1\r\ntext row2"
and so on.
For new line in textContent
You have to use \r\n
and, finally, I had to use css white-space: pre-line;
(Text will wrap when necessary, and on line breaks) and everything goes fine.
Or, You can use only white-space: pre;
and then text will wrap only on line breaks (in this case \r\n
).
So, there is example how to solve it with wrapping text only on line breaks :
var h1 = document.createElement("h1");
//setting this css style solving problem with new line in textContent
h1.setAttribute('style', 'white-space: pre;');
//add \r\n in text everywhere You want for line-break (new line)
h1.textContent = "This is a very long string and I would like to insert a carriage return \r\n...";
h1.textContent += "moreover, I would like to insert another carriage return \r\n...";
h1.textContent += "so this text will display in a new line";
document.body.appendChild(h1);
I ran into this a while ago. I found a good solution was to use the ASCII representation of carriage returns (CODE 13). JavaScript has a handy feature called String.fromCharCode()
which generates the string version of an ASCII code, or multiple codes separate by a comma. In my case, I needed to generate a CSV file from a long string and write it to a text area. I needed to be able to cut the text from the text area and save it into notepad. When I tried to use the <br />
method it would not preserve the carriage returns, however, using the fromCharCode method it does retain the returns. See my code below:
h1.innerHTML += "...I would like to insert a carriage return here..." + String.fromCharCode(13);
h1.innerHTML += "Ant the other line here..." + String.fromCharCode(13);
h1.innerHTML += "And so on..." + String.fromCharCode(13);
h1.innerHTML += "This prints hello: " + String.fromCharCode(72,69,76,76,79);
See here for more details on this method: w3Schools-fromCharCode()
See here for ASCII codes: ASCII Codes