📝H. G. Muller wrote on Fri, Dec 8, 2017 07:55 AM UTC:
Well, it sounds like a broken feature. Users would expect 'what you see is what you get' behavior from such a function, and there is no technical reason I can see why the browser could not provide that. There are plenty of pages on the web where you can, for instance, open or close sections, most of the sections starting closed. Especially the browser should be aware at any time of the HTML it is currently displaying, even if client-side scripts modified it from the original page source.
Well, it sounds like a broken feature. Users would expect 'what you see is what you get' behavior from such a function, and there is no technical reason I can see why the browser could not provide that. There are plenty of pages on the web where you can, for instance, open or close sections, most of the sections starting closed. Especially the browser should be aware at any time of the HTML it is currently displaying, even if client-side scripts modified it from the original page source.