In the code below there is a set interval. The interval works perfect. There also is a clearInterval, this one works aswell. When I click on the button with the ID sluitinfonew the interval should be set again, this also works. But offcourse the clearInterval doesn't work anymore because the var is within the function(i'm not sure). Is there a better way to do this? I can't get it to work.[code]
I've developed a plugin for a simple slide show. and here is the code [URL] The problem is when I mouse over the pic, the console error logs: "slideSwitch is not defined" The same error would still happen if I define function slideSwitch(){} and call
The page I'm creating is [URL] In IE7, the slideshow works fine until you get to a td which contains two img's. Then when you click you get a generic "invalid argument" error. You keep getting that until you mouse off the button and back on. Then you can click to advance the slideshow again. IE7 is the only browser where this happens.
I want to make a page which loads the div's with ajax The html code of the page is
Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html> <head> //styles and other script code <script language="javascript" src="../js/intro.js"></script> </script> [Code]....
Now the problem is that javascript "freezes" and setInterval does not work.. Is there any solution to load the files order such i have it in code one-by-one and run the message function?
I have a problem which I am not able to solve. I read a lot and tried many things but without being successful. Mhh.. The problem I struggle with is a simple .toggle() of a DIV. This is working fine. But now I do an ajax request and get the response back from my javascript ajax implementation (I'm using ajax anywhere). Within this implementation I work inside a callback routine which makes it possible accessing the response before updateing the DOM. Inside this routine I want to .toggle() but this is not working. It happens just nothing. I also do not get any javascript errors. As soon as the request is completly done I am able to .toggle() again.
When I am accessing the DIV by using jquery ($('#div_id')) it is referenced to the correct object within de document. Only the .toggle() does not work. .hide() for example is working fine.
Background: I am doing this like this, because I want to know if the response contains validation erros. If so I leave the DIV with the form inside as it is an highlight the error. Otherwise (no errors) I close the div with .toggle(), update the dom with the new form and open the DIV again.
Many reports are facing a problem that they lose the jquery binding. But this is not my problem as far as I understand.
I have an Iframe in my webpage wher I have the focus. I now want to give the focus back to the parent document, so i've used top.focus() in my code. Works fine in almost every browser but not inIE7.
I'm recently programming a website with ajax and no i have found a solution for the back button problem (broken) on the internet, but it doesn't work on IE. it works on firefox, chrome, safari,...
Every time the user changes the page the url is stored in history with this code:
Code:
It adds after the url a '#' sign with the name of the page...
After that the program will store the url in a non-displayed div
And now i've set up an interval that checks the url adress bar and that div if they are not the same the page will load the url in the adress bar here is the code:
Code:
I've checked the problem with IE. IE will not read the current adress bar. It's always reading the url of the current page but not the url of the adress bar. And i've tried almost every combination with document.location, window.location, href, hash,...at least here's is my url:[url]
I was trying to use a jQuery timer to repeat a function at intervals, but it didn't work in IE. Then I read that IE doesn't support setInterval, which seems amazing. Did I read this right? And if so, what do I use in jQuery to keep repeating a function at intervals? I've tried a few things and they all bomb out in IE, just doing something once, although they work in FF. What works in the execrable IE and real browsers?
I'm looking to have a lightbox pop up when a user clicks the Back button in their browser rather than just navigating back. The purpose is to ask a question with a Yes/No answer, and if they click No, I allow them to go back. The only thing I've found anything like this is the onUnload event, but that doesn't prevent them from going back. How should this be handled?
I am trying to write a script that uses the IF statement to see wether or not a user clicked the back button to come to a page, and then if it's true to not let the page load and kick them back X number of pages (say 4) This is what I have so far:
I am trying to capture the back button and redirect if it is a certain URL, if not just go back like a normal back button.I've never really messed with the history except for something like this: <a href="#" onClick="history.go(-1)">Anyone have an example using this plugin: [URL]r any other plugin that might achieve this
when I call obj.loop(); 'this' in obj.next refers to setInterval and not obj . I realise I can add var ref = this; and send it with setInterval but is there something I can do to get 'this' to refer to obj when in obj.next?
I'm attempting to create a small function that when called upon will change the CSS background property 10 times at 80 millisecond intervals. I'm pretty sure setInterval() is the way to go about this, but I've been toying with my script for an hour and can't get anything to work.
At each 80 millisecond interval, the CSS background property should change like so:
I would normally just use the background-position property, but it seems the hyphen throws javascript for a slip. It's really not necessary for this function, but if there's a way to use hyphens, it would be good to know for future reference.
So this works ok in the sense that the animation is performed smoothly. But to my understanding it should expand the height of the box 1pixel every 1ms, so it should expand very quickly from the base height to the maxHeight limit, but I click on the link and it animates soooooo slooooowly -- smoothly, i mean, but it takes well over a minute to expand to the full height. I just need to speed the damn thing up! Also, if i change "box.heightCount++;" to "box.heightCount+=1;" it gets all messed up. What am I missing here?
i'm scratching my head over achieving similar results with setInterval() function, and how I can keep it from looping infinitely.
I want to do something like this: var i = 0; var endTime = now + ((1000*60)*2); // 2 minutes after now while (now <=endTime) { i = i + 1; now = new Date().getTime(); } document.write("total iterations: " + i);
however you can't do this because of lag issues, so i'll settle for using setinterval on its smallest interval of a millisecond, here is my attempt to translate the above to a setinterval solution: var endTime = now + ((1000*60)*2); // 2 minutes after now var intervalID = setInterval(loopFunc(endTime),1); function loopFunc(endTime,intervalID) { if (new Date().getTime() <= endTime) { i = i + 1; } else { clearInterval(intervalID); }}
as you can see I have prolbems figuring out how to stop the interval from continuing to iterate, and passing the interval id, I'm clueless Also I'm clueless on echoing the total iterations via this method.
I'm trying to build the framework for an AJAX back/forward button fixer. Basically it uses the hash fix for them (using text after the # to add history objects). To this effect, the function to check for updates has to be run every second or so. No problem, I'll just use setInterval for that.
For whatever reason, though, setInterval gives me an error. Specifically that oldLocation (global variable) is undefined (in the checkURL function). So I try setTimeout. Same thing. When I just call the function explicitly once (adding checkURL(); to the end of the script) everything works wonderfuly; it's just setting it up on a timer that messes up. Frankly, I've no idea why it's doing this. (The bug just seems so odd) Maybe a more advanced JS coder can shed some light on it.. Code:
I have a webpage popup (lets call it POPUP) which refreshes the opener window (this one we call PARENT) when we close it, saying we want to save data. For this, we use
top.oWndOpener.refresh();
When we don't want to save the POPUP data, we just close the popup and don't refresh the PARENT. In the PARENT we have a "Back" link which executes a simple
history.back()
The problem is: If we refresh parent, we need to go back 2 pages, because the refresh method adds another page to the history. But we have no (easy) way of knowing in the PARENT if it had been refreshed. With this, our users are forced to click two times in the Back link.
Is there anyway of going back to the previous page, no matter how many refreshes happened in the current one ?