AvailabilityJavaScript 1.0 Synopsisdocument.write(value, ...) Arguments
Descriptiondocument.write( ) appends each of its arguments, in order, to document. Any arguments that are not strings are converted to strings before they are written to the end of the document. Document.write( ) is usually used in one of two ways. First, it can be invoked on the current document within a <script> tag or within a function that is executed while the document is being parsed. In this case, the write( ) method writes its HTML output as if that output appeared literally in the file at the location of the code that invoked the method. Second, you can use Document.write( ) to dynamically generate the contents of a document for a window other than the current window. In this case, the target document is never in the process of being parsed, and so the output cannot appear "in place" as it does in the case just described. In order for write( ) to output text into a document, that document must be open. You can open a document by explicitly calling the Document.open( ) method. In most cases this is unnecessary, however, because when write( ) is invoked on a document that is closed, it implicitly opens the document. When a document is opened, any contents that previously appeared in that document are discarded and replaced with a blank document. Once a document is open, Document.write( ) can append any amount of output to the end of the document. When a new document has been completely generated by this technique, the document should be closed by calling Document.close( ). Note that although the call to open( ) is usually optional, the call to close( ) is never optional. The results of calling Document.write( ) may not be immediately visible in the targeted web browser window or frame. This is because a web browser may buffer up data to output in larger chunks. Calling Document.close( ) is the only way to explicitly force all buffered output to be "flushed" and displayed in the browser window. See AlsoDocument.close( ), Document.open( ), Document.writeln( ); Chapter 14 |