how to stop the document.write opening a new window when called in a function, what I want to do is really simple but is defeating at every turn.I have a line of text that is a link on an html page,when clicked i want the the function called to print a name, imediatly after the calling link (on the same page).
i have an html page that when it loads theres an onLoad event called which calls a function.now what i want to do is be able to click a link that refreshes the page but at the time on the refresh it skips the onLoad event. is this possible?
I have an html page with a lot of JavaScript functions that all work fine. Then I decided to add a jQuery function, but the document ready is not executing when the page loads. As you can see below I've added the document.ready function at the top of the page, below the links. And below that are the JavaScript functions that were there all along. Why the document ready function doesn't execute? (I don't see the "ready" alert, and the jQuery isn't working.)
I wanted to know how can I check for a specific HTML tag or user defined TEXT and delete it when the page loads
Whenver the IE loads the page my company add its COMPANY NAME in my office on any page so what I want to do is to check for my company name b4 the page loads and remove the company name and then load the page.
I am working with a special tool which pre-processes the page. Using document.write, I am composing the page while it is loading, so I need to force a reprocess of the page AFTER the page loads.
Is there some way to do that? That is, I want the browser to essentially act as if the composed page was the original page.
Here is a brief version of the page construction technique:
I am making a calculator, and it is not finnished yet, but the problem i am running into is when i run the script it gets rid of everything but what it writes.
<html>
It works fine but it does not open it gets rid of everything but the document.write text. I want it to keep the old information and right the new information.
In my script there are two document.write lines. The problem is that when I call it from my ajax page it replaces the entire body and the page disappears.
Opening IE displays the following code fine. When I open a new window the code no longer works. All the HTML is overwritten with the first document.write statement.
This code pulls XML from a web site then parses it into a dynamically created table built with javascript. The write table is not working correctly, other methods work fine. This code also locks up Fire Fox to where it doesn't stop loading the page. Code:
Im trying to have a click event that replaces an image on the page with a new image that has been selected randomly from an array. I have solved PART of this already (can get the random image to appear). However, instead of appearing on the page where the old image was, the new image appears in a blank page.
My research indicates that this blank page location-problem is a result of using document.write in the Function. Therefore, I know I need to find a different way to accomplish this, but am failing miserably. I have been trying for hours and hours and HOURS to figure out proper syntax for accomplishing this via elements, functions, variables and mootools.
A bit of my research:
- I found this---but havent figured out how to implement it in my scenario:
- I found this---but havent figured out how to implement it in my scenario:
So I have an HTML page with javascript that takes input values, computes some results, and then puts these results in a table. Works great. Now I realize some users might want to print just the results table. So I add a button that allows the user to request the table in a separate window; clicking the button invokes a script to re-create the table in a separate window. Works fine except:
* In the status bar, the window appears to never finish loading * If you go to File -> Print then nothing seems to happen; however, if you close the generated window _then_ the print dialog appears; the window you want to print, however, is gone.code...
I am totally new to jQuery and no good knowledge on javascript. However, I was assigned a task, to convert a javascript program to jQuery due to compatibility problem on browsers like Chrome and Safari. My program originally use javascript xmlDoc.load('....') to read XML file, and then use document.write statement to write html tables on client side. Something like this (the sample below may got lots of syntax problem as I jut want to show the major part):
Code: document.write('<TABLE >'); var y=x[0].getElementsByTagName('NoOfRows'); for (i=0; i<=noofrows-1 && i<=y.length-1; i++){ document.write(' <TD>'); document.write(z[j].getElementsByTagName('RecordDetails')[0].childNodes[0].nodeValue; }
Now I changed to use jQuery, I can read the XML file elements. However, when I try to write the table, it failed:
I want to restrict getElementById to search children of a specific element instead of searching the entire document, in the same way that I can do getElementsByTagName using a specific element as the parent.
In this particular instance the parent is a table and the elements I'm interested in are all TDs, so I did the basic getElementsByTagName('TD') off the table and looped through this array checking the IDs. However, I'm suspecting that the browser can do getElementById faster than I can do a loop in javascript. Is there a neater way to do this? For now, I'll settle for IE-only solutions, though it would be nice to have things work in generic browsers.
I have a client that has ads on her website that really slow down the site. These ads are called by an off site javascript file and I want to use a jQuery(document).ready or similar method to call these files after all of the site content has loaded. But these files contain document.write functions to add more javascript files. Since I want to load the files after everything else has loaded, this in turn makes the page blank and then loads the ad. Is there a way to position where document.write will write to?
I'm working on a website that will basically embed a widget/frame sent by a handler into a user's current page. The user basically adds a script tag to where they would like the HTML to be. The script tag has their settings and is basically a document.write that calls all the code that we want displayed.So here's my problem. We have a map that we need to add in a specific section, and to get the map we have to call another script tag. So we end up having a script tag (map) embedded in another script tag (the code for the widget/frame) or we end up having to document.write inside a document.write.
Now this works just fine and as expected in Firefox, Safari, and Chrome. However, Internet Explorer and Opera wait until the first document.write is completely finished before calling the embedded one. Of course the problem with this, is that it takes the map out of the document's flow and just appends it to the bottom left of the page. Since the rest of the page has already been called, there's no way to move the interior "map" script.Any ideas? Basically just trying to figure out how (if even possible) to render an embedded script tag in Internet Explorer and be able to place it properly. I've tried everything that I can think of, including AJAX and Google's unescape script.
Im trying to have a click event that replaces an image on the page with a new image that has been selected randomly from an array. I have solved PART of this already (can get the random image to appear).
However, instead of appearing on the page where the old image was, the new image appears in a blank page.
My research indicates that this blank page location-problem is a result of using document.write in the Function. Therefore, I know I need to find a different way to accomplish this, but am failing miserably.
I have been trying for hours and hours and HOURS to figure out proper syntax for accomplishing this via elements, functions, variables and mootools.
A bit of my research:
-I found this---but havent figured out how to implement it in my scenario:
Source: [url]
-I found this---but havent figured out how to implement it in my scenario:
Instead of using many external scripts and CSS files in the header, can I just load them all using Javascript? The easiest way that I can think of is using document.write.. to get all the external files.
I cant seem to be able to write to a text file called users.txt Here is my code:
<html> <head> <script language="javascript"> function rf() { var fs,file; [Code]....
What I do is I put the code in notepad, I then save it as a .html file and try run it in IE 7, google chrome and firefox, Each time users.txt is unchanged.
It seems like when I load javascript code into a page, that each item I add, such as an accordian vertical navbar, image slider, etc, that each time I add one, the page loads a second or so slower with each one added. I would like some of these features, but is this just a part of life, or are there tricks to avoid the slower load time? It is not major time but after the 2 items I mentioned, it added on about 2 seconds.
I read that $(document).ready(function() might slow me down but I do not see that statement in any of my .js files.
In this program my basic intention is that as soon as the page loads, an alertbox will be called displaying the ALT value of image.
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
This is my test page.
It doesn't work. When i used plain javascript alert function in body tag with onload event, it worked well.
This (code) implementation just shows the text in strong tag and the image. There is no messagebox displaying the alt message. Please tell me where I'm wrong. I've already downloaded the jQuery library and it lies in the same folder as this code.