Related
I am not able to cancel the onbeforeunload in IE. I am not sure what is the issue but setting it to undefined does not have an effect. I want to unbind the event under certain condition. In all other browser it works though.
The code is mentioned below:-
$(document).ready(function(){
window.onbeforeunload = function(){
return '';
}
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
if(e.data==="UNBIND_UNLOAD"){
window.onbeforeunload = undefined;
window.close();
}
} , false);
$('#sendParentMessage').click(function(){
window.onbeforeunload = undefined;
window.opener.postMessage('Hi Child How are you!!!','*');
});
});
Add the events the proper way and remove them
var unloadFunction = function () {
return "test";
}
window.addEventListener('beforeunload', unloadFunction)
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
if(e.data==="UNBIND_UNLOAD"){
window.removeEventListener('beforeunload', unloadFunction)
window.close();
}
} , false);
or change the code to use a check inside the function instead of removing it
var isActiveCheck = true
var unloadFunction = function () {
return isActiveCheck ? "test" : undefined;
}
window.addEventListener('beforeunload', unloadFunction)
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
if(e.data==="UNBIND_UNLOAD"){
isActiveCheck = false
window.close();
}
} , false);
I understand that it is not possible to tell what the user is doing inside an iframe if it is cross domain. What I would like to do is track if the user clicked at all in the iframe. I imagine a scenario where there is an invisible div on top of the iframe and the the div will just then pass the click event to the iframe.
Is something like this possible? If it is, then how would I go about it? The iframes are ads, so I have no control over the tags that are used.
This is certainly possible. This works in Chrome, Firefox, and IE 11 (and probably others).
const message = document.getElementById("message");
// main document must be focused in order for window blur to fire when the iframe is interacted with.
// There's still an issue that if user interacts outside of the page and then click iframe first without clicking page, the following logic won't run. But since the OP is only concerned about first click this shouldn't be a problem.
window.focus()
window.addEventListener("blur", () => {
setTimeout(() => {
if (document.activeElement.tagName === "IFRAME") {
message.textContent = "clicked " + Date.now();
console.log("clicked");
}
});
}, { once: true });
<div id="message"></div>
<iframe width="50%" height="300" src="//example.com"></iframe>
Caveat: This only detects the first click. As I understand, that is all you want.
This is small solution that works in all browsers even IE8:
var monitor = setInterval(function(){
var elem = document.activeElement;
if(elem && elem.tagName == 'IFRAME'){
clearInterval(monitor);
alert('clicked!');
}
}, 100);
You can test it here: http://jsfiddle.net/oqjgzsm0/
Based on Mohammed Radwan's answer I came up with the following jQuery solution. Basically what it does is keep track of what iFrame people are hovering. Then if the window blurs that most likely means the user clicked the iframe banner.
the iframe should be put in a div with an id, to make sure you know which iframe the user clicked on:
<div class='banner' bannerid='yyy'>
<iframe src='http://somedomain.com/whatever.html'></iframe>
<div>
so:
$(document).ready( function() {
var overiFrame = -1;
$('iframe').hover( function() {
overiFrame = $(this).closest('.banner').attr('bannerid');
}, function() {
overiFrame = -1
});
...
this keeps overiFrame at -1 when no iFrames are hovered, or the 'bannerid' set in the wrapping div when an iframe is hovered. All you have to do is check if 'overiFrame' is set when the window blurs, like so:
...
$(window).blur( function() {
if( overiFrame != -1 )
$.post('log.php', {id:overiFrame}); /* example, do your stats here */
});
});
Very elegant solution with a minor downside: if a user presses ALT-F4 when hovering the mouse over an iFrame it will log it as a click. This only happened in FireFox though, IE, Chrome and Safari didn't register it.
Thanks again Mohammed, very useful solution!
Is something like this possible?
No. All you can do is detect the mouse going into the iframe, and potentially (though not reliably) when it comes back out (ie. trying to work out the difference between the pointer passing over the ad on its way somewhere else versus lingering on the ad).
I imagine a scenario where there is an invisible div on top of the iframe and the the div will just then pass the click event to the iframe.
Nope, there is no way to fake a click event.
By catching the mousedown you'd prevent the original click from getting to the iframe. If you could determine when the mouse button was about to be pressed you could try to get the invisible div out of the way so that the click would go through... but there is also no event that fires just before a mousedown.
You could try to guess, for example by looking to see if the pointer has come to rest, guessing a click might be about to come. But it's totally unreliable, and if you fail you've just lost yourself a click-through.
The following code will show you if the user click/hover or move out of the iframe:-
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
<title>Detect IFrame Clicks</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
var isOverIFrame = false;
function processMouseOut() {
log("IFrame mouse >> OUT << detected.");
isOverIFrame = false;
top.focus();
}
function processMouseOver() {
log("IFrame mouse >> OVER << detected.");
isOverIFrame = true;
}
function processIFrameClick() {
if(isOverIFrame) {
// replace with your function
log("IFrame >> CLICK << detected. ");
}
}
function log(message) {
var console = document.getElementById("console");
var text = console.value;
text = text + message + "\n";
console.value = text;
}
function attachOnloadEvent(func, obj) {
if(typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
window.addEventListener('load', func, false);
} else if (typeof document.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
document.addEventListener('load', func, false);
} else if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
window.attachEvent('onload', func);
} else {
if (typeof window.onload == 'function') {
var oldonload = onload;
window.onload = function() {
oldonload();
func();
};
} else {
window.onload = func;
}
}
}
function init() {
var element = document.getElementsByTagName("iframe");
for (var i=0; i<element.length; i++) {
element[i].onmouseover = processMouseOver;
element[i].onmouseout = processMouseOut;
}
if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', processIFrameClick);
}
else if (typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', processIFrameClick, false);
}
}
attachOnloadEvent(init);
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<iframe src="www.google.com" width="100%" height="1300px"></iframe>
<br></br>
<br></br>
<form name="form" id="form" action=""><textarea name="console"
id="console" style="width: 100%; height: 300px;" cols="" rows=""></textarea>
<button name="clear" id="clear" type="reset">Clear</button>
</form>
</body>
</html>
You need to replace the src in the iframe with your own link. Hope this'll help.
Regards,
Mo.
Just found this solution...
I tried it, I loved it..
Works for cross domain iframes for desktop and mobile!
Don't know if it is foolproof yet
window.focus();
window.addEventListener('blur',function(){
if(document.activeElement.id == 'CrossDomainiframeId'){
//do something :-)
}
});
Happy coding
You can achieve this by using the blur event on window element.
Here is a jQuery plugin for tracking click on iframes (it will fire a custom callback function when an iframe is clicked) :
https://github.com/finalclap/iframeTracker-jquery
Use it like this :
jQuery(document).ready(function($){
$('.iframe_wrap iframe').iframeTracker({
blurCallback: function(){
// Do something when iframe is clicked (like firing an XHR request)
}
});
});
see http://jsfiddle.net/Lcy797h2/ for my long winded solution that doesn't work reliably in IE
$(window).on('blur',function(e) {
if($(this).data('mouseIn') != 'yes')return;
$('iframe').filter(function(){
return $(this).data('mouseIn') == 'yes';
}).trigger('iframeclick');
});
$(window).mouseenter(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
}).mouseleave(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'no');
});
$('iframe').mouseenter(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
$(window).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
}).mouseleave(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', null);
});
$('iframe').on('iframeclick', function(){
console.log('Clicked inside iframe');
$('#result').text('Clicked inside iframe');
});
$(window).on('click', function(){
console.log('Clicked inside window');
$('#result').text('Clicked inside window');
}).blur(function(){
console.log('window blur');
});
$('<input type="text" style="position:absolute;opacity:0;height:0px;width:0px;"/>').appendTo(document.body).blur(function(){
$(window).trigger('blur');
}).focus();
http://jsfiddle.net/QcAee/406/
Just make a invisible layer over the iframe that go back when click and go up when mouseleave event will be fired !!
Need jQuery
this solution don't propagate first click inside iframe!
$("#invisible_layer").on("click",function(){
alert("click");
$("#invisible_layer").css("z-index",-11);
});
$("iframe").on("mouseleave",function(){
$("#invisible_layer").css("z-index",11);
});
iframe {
width: 500px;
height: 300px;
}
#invisible_layer{
position: absolute;
background-color:trasparent;
width: 500px;
height:300px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="message"></div>
<div id="invisible_layer">
</div>
<iframe id="iframe" src="//example.com"></iframe>
This works for me on all browsers (included Firefox)
https://gist.github.com/jaydson/1780598
https://jsfiddle.net/sidanmor/v6m9exsw/
var myConfObj = {
iframeMouseOver : false
}
window.addEventListener('blur',function(){
if(myConfObj.iframeMouseOver){
console.log('Wow! Iframe Click!');
}
});
document.getElementById('idanmorblog').addEventListener('mouseover',function(){
myConfObj.iframeMouseOver = true;
});
document.getElementById('idanmorblog').addEventListener('mouseout',function(){
myConfObj.iframeMouseOver = false;
});
<iframe id="idanmorblog" src="https://sidanmor.com/" style="width:400px;height:600px" ></iframe>
<iframe id="idanmorblog" src="https://sidanmor.com/" style="width:400px;height:600px" ></iframe>
Mohammed Radwan,
Your solution is elegant. To detect iframe clicks in Firefox and IE, you can use a simple method with document.activeElement and a timer, however... I have searched all over the interwebs for a method to detect clicks on an iframe in Chrome and Safari. At the brink of giving up, I find your answer. Thank you, sir!
Some tips:
I have found your solution to be more reliable when calling the init() function directly, rather than through attachOnloadEvent(). Of course to do that, you must call init() only after the iframe html. So it would look something like:
<script>
var isOverIFrame = false;
function processMouseOut() {
isOverIFrame = false;
top.focus();
}
function processMouseOver() { isOverIFrame = true; }
function processIFrameClick() {
if(isOverIFrame) {
//was clicked
}
}
function init() {
var element = document.getElementsByTagName("iframe");
for (var i=0; i<element.length; i++) {
element[i].onmouseover = processMouseOver;
element[i].onmouseout = processMouseOut;
}
if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', processIFrameClick);
}
else if (typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', processIFrameClick, false);
}
}
</script>
<iframe src="http://google.com"></iframe>
<script>init();</script>
You can do this to bubble events to parent document:
$('iframe').load(function() {
var eventlist = 'click dblclick \
blur focus focusin focusout \
keydown keypress keyup \
mousedown mouseenter mouseleave mousemove mouseover mouseout mouseup mousemove \
touchstart touchend touchcancel touchleave touchmove';
var iframe = $('iframe').contents().find('html');
// Bubble events to parent
iframe.on(eventlist, function(event) {
$('html').trigger(event);
});
});
Just extend the eventlist for more events.
I ran into a situation where I had to track clicks on a social media button pulled in through an iframe. A new window would be opened when the button was clicked. Here was my solution:
var iframeClick = function () {
var isOverIframe = false,
windowLostBlur = function () {
if (isOverIframe === true) {
// DO STUFF
isOverIframe = false;
}
};
jQuery(window).focus();
jQuery('#iframe').mouseenter(function(){
isOverIframe = true;
console.log(isOverIframe);
});
jQuery('#iframe').mouseleave(function(){
isOverIframe = false;
console.log(isOverIframe);
});
jQuery(window).blur(function () {
windowLostBlur();
});
};
iframeClick();
Combining above answer with ability to click again and again without clicking outside iframe.
var eventListener = window.addEventListener('blur', function() {
if (document.activeElement === document.getElementById('contentIFrame')) {
toFunction(); //function you want to call on click
setTimeout(function(){ window.focus(); }, 0);
}
window.removeEventListener('blur', eventListener );
});
This definitely works if the iframe is from the same domain as your parent site. I have not tested it for cross-domain sites.
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).click(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mousedown(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mouseup(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
Without jQuery you could try something like this, but again I have not tried this.
window.frames['YouriFrameId'].onmousedown = function() { do something here }
You can even filter your results:
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mousedown(function(event){
var eventId = $(event.target).attr('id');
if (eventId == 'the-id-you-want') {
// do something
}
});
We can catch all the clicks. The idea is to reset focus on an element outside the iFrame after each click:
<input type="text" style="position:fixed;top:-1000px;left:-1000px">
<div id="message"></div>
<iframe id="iframe" src="//example.com"></iframe>
<script>
focus();
addEventListener('blur', function() {
if(document.activeElement = document.getElementById('iframe')) {
message.innerHTML += 'Clicked';
setTimeout(function () {
document.querySelector("input").focus();
message.innerHTML += ' - Reset focus,';
}, 1000);
}
});
</script>
JSFiddle
Assumptions -
Your script runs outside the iframe BUT NOT in the outermost window.top window. (For outermost window, other blur solutions are good enough)
A new page is opened replacing the current page / a new page in a new tab and control is switched to new tab.
This works for both sourceful and sourceless iframes
var ifr = document.getElementById("my-iframe");
var isMouseIn;
ifr.addEventListener('mouseenter', () => {
isMouseIn = true;
});
ifr.addEventListener('mouseleave', () => {
isMouseIn = false;
});
window.document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", () => {
if (isMouseIn && document.hidden) {
console.log("Click Recorded By Visibility Change");
}
});
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", (event) => {
if (isMouseIn) {
console.log("Click Recorded By Before Unload");
}
});
If a new tab is opened / same page unloads and the mouse pointer is within the Iframe, a click is considered
Based in the answer of Paul Draper, I created a solution that work continuously when you have Iframes that open other tab in the browser. When you return the page continue to be active to detect the click over the framework, this is a very common situation:
focus();
$(window).blur(() => {
let frame = document.activeElement;
if (document.activeElement.tagName == "IFRAME") {
// Do you action.. here frame has the iframe clicked
let frameid = frame.getAttribute('id')
let frameurl = (frame.getAttribute('src'));
}
});
document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", function () {
if (document.hidden) {
} else {
focus();
}
});
The Code is simple, the blur event detect the lost of focus when the iframe is clicked, and test if the active element is the iframe (if you have several iframe you can know who was selected) this situation is frequently when you have publicity frames.
The second event trigger a focus method when you return to the page. it is used the visibility change event.
Here is solution using suggested approaches with hover+blur and active element tricks, not any libraries, just pure js. Works fine for FF/Chrome. Mostly approache is same as #Mohammed Radwan proposed, except that I use different method proposed by #zone117x to track iframe click for FF, because window.focus is not working without addition user settings:
Makes a request to bring the window to the front. It may fail due to
user settings and the window isn't guaranteed to be frontmost before
this method returns.
Here is compound method:
function () {
const state = {};
(function (setup) {
if (typeof window.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
window.addEventListener('load', setup, false);
} else if (typeof document.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
document.addEventListener('load', setup, false);
} else if (typeof window.attachEvent !== 'undefined') {
window.attachEvent('onload', setup);
} else {
if (typeof window.onload === 'function') {
const oldonload = onload;
window.onload = function () {
oldonload();
setup();
};
} else {
window.onload = setup;
}
}
})(function () {
state.isOverIFrame = false;
state.firstBlur = false;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
findIFramesAndBindListeners();
document.body.addEventListener('click', onClick);
if (typeof window.attachEvent !== 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', function () {
state.firstBlur = true;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
onIFrameClick()
});
top.attachEvent('onfocus', function () {
state.hasFocusAcquired = true;
console.log('attachEvent.focus');
});
} else if (typeof window.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', function () {
state.firstBlur = true;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
onIFrameClick();
}, false);
top.addEventListener('focus', function () {
state.hasFocusAcquired = true;
console.log('addEventListener.focus');
});
}
setInterval(findIFramesAndBindListeners, 500);
});
function isFF() {
return navigator.userAgent.search(/firefox/i) !== -1;
}
function isActiveElementChanged() {
const prevActiveTag = document.activeElement.tagName.toUpperCase();
document.activeElement.blur();
const currActiveTag = document.activeElement.tagName.toUpperCase();
return !prevActiveTag.includes('BODY') && currActiveTag.includes('BODY');
}
function onMouseOut() {
if (!state.firstBlur && isFF() && isActiveElementChanged()) {
console.log('firefox first click');
onClick();
} else {
document.activeElement.blur();
top.focus();
}
state.isOverIFrame = false;
console.log(`onMouseOut`);
}
function onMouseOver() {
state.isOverIFrame = true;
console.log(`onMouseOver`);
}
function onIFrameClick() {
console.log(`onIFrameClick`);
if (state.isOverIFrame) {
onClick();
}
}
function onClick() {
console.log(`onClick`);
}
function findIFramesAndBindListeners() {
return Array.from(document.getElementsByTagName('iframe'))
.forEach(function (element) {
element.onmouseover = onMouseOver;
element.onmouseout = onMouseOut;
});
}
}
A colleague and I, we have a problem similar to that of Brian Trumpsett and found this thread very helpful.
Our kiosk has animations inside iframes and we need to track the page activity to set a timer.
As suggested here, rather than tracking the clicks, we now detect the focus change at each click and change it back
The following code is Okay on macOS with Safari and Chrome but does not work with FireFox (why?):
var eventListener = window.addEventListener('blur', function() {
if (document.activeElement.classList && document.activeElement.classList[0] == 'contentiFrame') {
refresh(); //function you want to call on click
setTimeout(function(){ window.focus(); }, 1);
}
window.removeEventListener('blur', eventListener );
});
The problem is that, on Windows, it works neither with Chrome nor with FireFox and thus, our kiosk is not functional.
Do you know why it is not working ?
Do you have a solution to make it work on Windows ?
As found there : Detect Click into Iframe using JavaScript
=> We can use iframeTracker-jquery :
$('.carousel-inner .item').each(function(e) {
var item = this;
var iFrame = $(item).find('iframe');
if (iFrame.length > 0) {
iFrame.iframeTracker({
blurCallback: function(){
// Do something when iFrame is clicked (like firing an XHR request)
onItemClick.bind(item)(); // calling regular click with right context
console.log('IFrameClick => OK');
}
});
console.log('IFrameTrackingRegistred => OK');
}
})
My approach was similar to that proposed by Paul Draper above. However, it didn't work in Firefox because activeElement did not update in time for the code to execute. So we wait a little bit.
This will also fire if you tab into the iframe. For my use case, it's fine, but you could filter for that keypress.
addEventListenerOnIframe() {
window.addEventListener('blur', this.onBlur);
}
onBlur = () => {
setTimeout(() => {
let activeElement = document.activeElement;
let iframeElement = document.querySelector('iframe');
if (activeElement === iframeElement) {
//execute your code here
//we only want to listen for the first time we click into the iframe
window.removeEventListener('blur', this.onBlur);
}
}, 500);
};
I believe you can do something like:
$('iframe').contents().click(function(){function to record click here });
using jQuery to accomplish this.
I understand that it is not possible to tell what the user is doing inside an iframe if it is cross domain. What I would like to do is track if the user clicked at all in the iframe. I imagine a scenario where there is an invisible div on top of the iframe and the the div will just then pass the click event to the iframe.
Is something like this possible? If it is, then how would I go about it? The iframes are ads, so I have no control over the tags that are used.
This is certainly possible. This works in Chrome, Firefox, and IE 11 (and probably others).
const message = document.getElementById("message");
// main document must be focused in order for window blur to fire when the iframe is interacted with.
// There's still an issue that if user interacts outside of the page and then click iframe first without clicking page, the following logic won't run. But since the OP is only concerned about first click this shouldn't be a problem.
window.focus()
window.addEventListener("blur", () => {
setTimeout(() => {
if (document.activeElement.tagName === "IFRAME") {
message.textContent = "clicked " + Date.now();
console.log("clicked");
}
});
}, { once: true });
<div id="message"></div>
<iframe width="50%" height="300" src="//example.com"></iframe>
Caveat: This only detects the first click. As I understand, that is all you want.
This is small solution that works in all browsers even IE8:
var monitor = setInterval(function(){
var elem = document.activeElement;
if(elem && elem.tagName == 'IFRAME'){
clearInterval(monitor);
alert('clicked!');
}
}, 100);
You can test it here: http://jsfiddle.net/oqjgzsm0/
Based on Mohammed Radwan's answer I came up with the following jQuery solution. Basically what it does is keep track of what iFrame people are hovering. Then if the window blurs that most likely means the user clicked the iframe banner.
the iframe should be put in a div with an id, to make sure you know which iframe the user clicked on:
<div class='banner' bannerid='yyy'>
<iframe src='http://somedomain.com/whatever.html'></iframe>
<div>
so:
$(document).ready( function() {
var overiFrame = -1;
$('iframe').hover( function() {
overiFrame = $(this).closest('.banner').attr('bannerid');
}, function() {
overiFrame = -1
});
...
this keeps overiFrame at -1 when no iFrames are hovered, or the 'bannerid' set in the wrapping div when an iframe is hovered. All you have to do is check if 'overiFrame' is set when the window blurs, like so:
...
$(window).blur( function() {
if( overiFrame != -1 )
$.post('log.php', {id:overiFrame}); /* example, do your stats here */
});
});
Very elegant solution with a minor downside: if a user presses ALT-F4 when hovering the mouse over an iFrame it will log it as a click. This only happened in FireFox though, IE, Chrome and Safari didn't register it.
Thanks again Mohammed, very useful solution!
Is something like this possible?
No. All you can do is detect the mouse going into the iframe, and potentially (though not reliably) when it comes back out (ie. trying to work out the difference between the pointer passing over the ad on its way somewhere else versus lingering on the ad).
I imagine a scenario where there is an invisible div on top of the iframe and the the div will just then pass the click event to the iframe.
Nope, there is no way to fake a click event.
By catching the mousedown you'd prevent the original click from getting to the iframe. If you could determine when the mouse button was about to be pressed you could try to get the invisible div out of the way so that the click would go through... but there is also no event that fires just before a mousedown.
You could try to guess, for example by looking to see if the pointer has come to rest, guessing a click might be about to come. But it's totally unreliable, and if you fail you've just lost yourself a click-through.
The following code will show you if the user click/hover or move out of the iframe:-
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
<title>Detect IFrame Clicks</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
var isOverIFrame = false;
function processMouseOut() {
log("IFrame mouse >> OUT << detected.");
isOverIFrame = false;
top.focus();
}
function processMouseOver() {
log("IFrame mouse >> OVER << detected.");
isOverIFrame = true;
}
function processIFrameClick() {
if(isOverIFrame) {
// replace with your function
log("IFrame >> CLICK << detected. ");
}
}
function log(message) {
var console = document.getElementById("console");
var text = console.value;
text = text + message + "\n";
console.value = text;
}
function attachOnloadEvent(func, obj) {
if(typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
window.addEventListener('load', func, false);
} else if (typeof document.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
document.addEventListener('load', func, false);
} else if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
window.attachEvent('onload', func);
} else {
if (typeof window.onload == 'function') {
var oldonload = onload;
window.onload = function() {
oldonload();
func();
};
} else {
window.onload = func;
}
}
}
function init() {
var element = document.getElementsByTagName("iframe");
for (var i=0; i<element.length; i++) {
element[i].onmouseover = processMouseOver;
element[i].onmouseout = processMouseOut;
}
if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', processIFrameClick);
}
else if (typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', processIFrameClick, false);
}
}
attachOnloadEvent(init);
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<iframe src="www.google.com" width="100%" height="1300px"></iframe>
<br></br>
<br></br>
<form name="form" id="form" action=""><textarea name="console"
id="console" style="width: 100%; height: 300px;" cols="" rows=""></textarea>
<button name="clear" id="clear" type="reset">Clear</button>
</form>
</body>
</html>
You need to replace the src in the iframe with your own link. Hope this'll help.
Regards,
Mo.
Just found this solution...
I tried it, I loved it..
Works for cross domain iframes for desktop and mobile!
Don't know if it is foolproof yet
window.focus();
window.addEventListener('blur',function(){
if(document.activeElement.id == 'CrossDomainiframeId'){
//do something :-)
}
});
Happy coding
You can achieve this by using the blur event on window element.
Here is a jQuery plugin for tracking click on iframes (it will fire a custom callback function when an iframe is clicked) :
https://github.com/finalclap/iframeTracker-jquery
Use it like this :
jQuery(document).ready(function($){
$('.iframe_wrap iframe').iframeTracker({
blurCallback: function(){
// Do something when iframe is clicked (like firing an XHR request)
}
});
});
see http://jsfiddle.net/Lcy797h2/ for my long winded solution that doesn't work reliably in IE
$(window).on('blur',function(e) {
if($(this).data('mouseIn') != 'yes')return;
$('iframe').filter(function(){
return $(this).data('mouseIn') == 'yes';
}).trigger('iframeclick');
});
$(window).mouseenter(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
}).mouseleave(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'no');
});
$('iframe').mouseenter(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
$(window).data('mouseIn', 'yes');
}).mouseleave(function(){
$(this).data('mouseIn', null);
});
$('iframe').on('iframeclick', function(){
console.log('Clicked inside iframe');
$('#result').text('Clicked inside iframe');
});
$(window).on('click', function(){
console.log('Clicked inside window');
$('#result').text('Clicked inside window');
}).blur(function(){
console.log('window blur');
});
$('<input type="text" style="position:absolute;opacity:0;height:0px;width:0px;"/>').appendTo(document.body).blur(function(){
$(window).trigger('blur');
}).focus();
http://jsfiddle.net/QcAee/406/
Just make a invisible layer over the iframe that go back when click and go up when mouseleave event will be fired !!
Need jQuery
this solution don't propagate first click inside iframe!
$("#invisible_layer").on("click",function(){
alert("click");
$("#invisible_layer").css("z-index",-11);
});
$("iframe").on("mouseleave",function(){
$("#invisible_layer").css("z-index",11);
});
iframe {
width: 500px;
height: 300px;
}
#invisible_layer{
position: absolute;
background-color:trasparent;
width: 500px;
height:300px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="message"></div>
<div id="invisible_layer">
</div>
<iframe id="iframe" src="//example.com"></iframe>
This works for me on all browsers (included Firefox)
https://gist.github.com/jaydson/1780598
https://jsfiddle.net/sidanmor/v6m9exsw/
var myConfObj = {
iframeMouseOver : false
}
window.addEventListener('blur',function(){
if(myConfObj.iframeMouseOver){
console.log('Wow! Iframe Click!');
}
});
document.getElementById('idanmorblog').addEventListener('mouseover',function(){
myConfObj.iframeMouseOver = true;
});
document.getElementById('idanmorblog').addEventListener('mouseout',function(){
myConfObj.iframeMouseOver = false;
});
<iframe id="idanmorblog" src="https://sidanmor.com/" style="width:400px;height:600px" ></iframe>
<iframe id="idanmorblog" src="https://sidanmor.com/" style="width:400px;height:600px" ></iframe>
Mohammed Radwan,
Your solution is elegant. To detect iframe clicks in Firefox and IE, you can use a simple method with document.activeElement and a timer, however... I have searched all over the interwebs for a method to detect clicks on an iframe in Chrome and Safari. At the brink of giving up, I find your answer. Thank you, sir!
Some tips:
I have found your solution to be more reliable when calling the init() function directly, rather than through attachOnloadEvent(). Of course to do that, you must call init() only after the iframe html. So it would look something like:
<script>
var isOverIFrame = false;
function processMouseOut() {
isOverIFrame = false;
top.focus();
}
function processMouseOver() { isOverIFrame = true; }
function processIFrameClick() {
if(isOverIFrame) {
//was clicked
}
}
function init() {
var element = document.getElementsByTagName("iframe");
for (var i=0; i<element.length; i++) {
element[i].onmouseover = processMouseOver;
element[i].onmouseout = processMouseOut;
}
if (typeof window.attachEvent != 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', processIFrameClick);
}
else if (typeof window.addEventListener != 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', processIFrameClick, false);
}
}
</script>
<iframe src="http://google.com"></iframe>
<script>init();</script>
You can do this to bubble events to parent document:
$('iframe').load(function() {
var eventlist = 'click dblclick \
blur focus focusin focusout \
keydown keypress keyup \
mousedown mouseenter mouseleave mousemove mouseover mouseout mouseup mousemove \
touchstart touchend touchcancel touchleave touchmove';
var iframe = $('iframe').contents().find('html');
// Bubble events to parent
iframe.on(eventlist, function(event) {
$('html').trigger(event);
});
});
Just extend the eventlist for more events.
I ran into a situation where I had to track clicks on a social media button pulled in through an iframe. A new window would be opened when the button was clicked. Here was my solution:
var iframeClick = function () {
var isOverIframe = false,
windowLostBlur = function () {
if (isOverIframe === true) {
// DO STUFF
isOverIframe = false;
}
};
jQuery(window).focus();
jQuery('#iframe').mouseenter(function(){
isOverIframe = true;
console.log(isOverIframe);
});
jQuery('#iframe').mouseleave(function(){
isOverIframe = false;
console.log(isOverIframe);
});
jQuery(window).blur(function () {
windowLostBlur();
});
};
iframeClick();
Combining above answer with ability to click again and again without clicking outside iframe.
var eventListener = window.addEventListener('blur', function() {
if (document.activeElement === document.getElementById('contentIFrame')) {
toFunction(); //function you want to call on click
setTimeout(function(){ window.focus(); }, 0);
}
window.removeEventListener('blur', eventListener );
});
This definitely works if the iframe is from the same domain as your parent site. I have not tested it for cross-domain sites.
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).click(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mousedown(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mouseup(function(event){ /* do something here */ });
Without jQuery you could try something like this, but again I have not tried this.
window.frames['YouriFrameId'].onmousedown = function() { do something here }
You can even filter your results:
$(window.frames['YouriFrameId']).mousedown(function(event){
var eventId = $(event.target).attr('id');
if (eventId == 'the-id-you-want') {
// do something
}
});
We can catch all the clicks. The idea is to reset focus on an element outside the iFrame after each click:
<input type="text" style="position:fixed;top:-1000px;left:-1000px">
<div id="message"></div>
<iframe id="iframe" src="//example.com"></iframe>
<script>
focus();
addEventListener('blur', function() {
if(document.activeElement = document.getElementById('iframe')) {
message.innerHTML += 'Clicked';
setTimeout(function () {
document.querySelector("input").focus();
message.innerHTML += ' - Reset focus,';
}, 1000);
}
});
</script>
JSFiddle
Assumptions -
Your script runs outside the iframe BUT NOT in the outermost window.top window. (For outermost window, other blur solutions are good enough)
A new page is opened replacing the current page / a new page in a new tab and control is switched to new tab.
This works for both sourceful and sourceless iframes
var ifr = document.getElementById("my-iframe");
var isMouseIn;
ifr.addEventListener('mouseenter', () => {
isMouseIn = true;
});
ifr.addEventListener('mouseleave', () => {
isMouseIn = false;
});
window.document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", () => {
if (isMouseIn && document.hidden) {
console.log("Click Recorded By Visibility Change");
}
});
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", (event) => {
if (isMouseIn) {
console.log("Click Recorded By Before Unload");
}
});
If a new tab is opened / same page unloads and the mouse pointer is within the Iframe, a click is considered
Based in the answer of Paul Draper, I created a solution that work continuously when you have Iframes that open other tab in the browser. When you return the page continue to be active to detect the click over the framework, this is a very common situation:
focus();
$(window).blur(() => {
let frame = document.activeElement;
if (document.activeElement.tagName == "IFRAME") {
// Do you action.. here frame has the iframe clicked
let frameid = frame.getAttribute('id')
let frameurl = (frame.getAttribute('src'));
}
});
document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", function () {
if (document.hidden) {
} else {
focus();
}
});
The Code is simple, the blur event detect the lost of focus when the iframe is clicked, and test if the active element is the iframe (if you have several iframe you can know who was selected) this situation is frequently when you have publicity frames.
The second event trigger a focus method when you return to the page. it is used the visibility change event.
Here is solution using suggested approaches with hover+blur and active element tricks, not any libraries, just pure js. Works fine for FF/Chrome. Mostly approache is same as #Mohammed Radwan proposed, except that I use different method proposed by #zone117x to track iframe click for FF, because window.focus is not working without addition user settings:
Makes a request to bring the window to the front. It may fail due to
user settings and the window isn't guaranteed to be frontmost before
this method returns.
Here is compound method:
function () {
const state = {};
(function (setup) {
if (typeof window.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
window.addEventListener('load', setup, false);
} else if (typeof document.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
document.addEventListener('load', setup, false);
} else if (typeof window.attachEvent !== 'undefined') {
window.attachEvent('onload', setup);
} else {
if (typeof window.onload === 'function') {
const oldonload = onload;
window.onload = function () {
oldonload();
setup();
};
} else {
window.onload = setup;
}
}
})(function () {
state.isOverIFrame = false;
state.firstBlur = false;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
findIFramesAndBindListeners();
document.body.addEventListener('click', onClick);
if (typeof window.attachEvent !== 'undefined') {
top.attachEvent('onblur', function () {
state.firstBlur = true;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
onIFrameClick()
});
top.attachEvent('onfocus', function () {
state.hasFocusAcquired = true;
console.log('attachEvent.focus');
});
} else if (typeof window.addEventListener !== 'undefined') {
top.addEventListener('blur', function () {
state.firstBlur = true;
state.hasFocusAcquired = false;
onIFrameClick();
}, false);
top.addEventListener('focus', function () {
state.hasFocusAcquired = true;
console.log('addEventListener.focus');
});
}
setInterval(findIFramesAndBindListeners, 500);
});
function isFF() {
return navigator.userAgent.search(/firefox/i) !== -1;
}
function isActiveElementChanged() {
const prevActiveTag = document.activeElement.tagName.toUpperCase();
document.activeElement.blur();
const currActiveTag = document.activeElement.tagName.toUpperCase();
return !prevActiveTag.includes('BODY') && currActiveTag.includes('BODY');
}
function onMouseOut() {
if (!state.firstBlur && isFF() && isActiveElementChanged()) {
console.log('firefox first click');
onClick();
} else {
document.activeElement.blur();
top.focus();
}
state.isOverIFrame = false;
console.log(`onMouseOut`);
}
function onMouseOver() {
state.isOverIFrame = true;
console.log(`onMouseOver`);
}
function onIFrameClick() {
console.log(`onIFrameClick`);
if (state.isOverIFrame) {
onClick();
}
}
function onClick() {
console.log(`onClick`);
}
function findIFramesAndBindListeners() {
return Array.from(document.getElementsByTagName('iframe'))
.forEach(function (element) {
element.onmouseover = onMouseOver;
element.onmouseout = onMouseOut;
});
}
}
A colleague and I, we have a problem similar to that of Brian Trumpsett and found this thread very helpful.
Our kiosk has animations inside iframes and we need to track the page activity to set a timer.
As suggested here, rather than tracking the clicks, we now detect the focus change at each click and change it back
The following code is Okay on macOS with Safari and Chrome but does not work with FireFox (why?):
var eventListener = window.addEventListener('blur', function() {
if (document.activeElement.classList && document.activeElement.classList[0] == 'contentiFrame') {
refresh(); //function you want to call on click
setTimeout(function(){ window.focus(); }, 1);
}
window.removeEventListener('blur', eventListener );
});
The problem is that, on Windows, it works neither with Chrome nor with FireFox and thus, our kiosk is not functional.
Do you know why it is not working ?
Do you have a solution to make it work on Windows ?
As found there : Detect Click into Iframe using JavaScript
=> We can use iframeTracker-jquery :
$('.carousel-inner .item').each(function(e) {
var item = this;
var iFrame = $(item).find('iframe');
if (iFrame.length > 0) {
iFrame.iframeTracker({
blurCallback: function(){
// Do something when iFrame is clicked (like firing an XHR request)
onItemClick.bind(item)(); // calling regular click with right context
console.log('IFrameClick => OK');
}
});
console.log('IFrameTrackingRegistred => OK');
}
})
My approach was similar to that proposed by Paul Draper above. However, it didn't work in Firefox because activeElement did not update in time for the code to execute. So we wait a little bit.
This will also fire if you tab into the iframe. For my use case, it's fine, but you could filter for that keypress.
addEventListenerOnIframe() {
window.addEventListener('blur', this.onBlur);
}
onBlur = () => {
setTimeout(() => {
let activeElement = document.activeElement;
let iframeElement = document.querySelector('iframe');
if (activeElement === iframeElement) {
//execute your code here
//we only want to listen for the first time we click into the iframe
window.removeEventListener('blur', this.onBlur);
}
}, 500);
};
I believe you can do something like:
$('iframe').contents().click(function(){function to record click here });
using jQuery to accomplish this.
I can't seem to add these event listeners at page load reliably. Some of the listeners work from the beginning, but others only work after a few clicks. What might be wrong? Could the problem be that I'm mixing native JS with jQuery?
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
function resetValidation() {
jQuery('#contact-form').validate().resetForm();
};
function resetFormFields() {
document.getElementById('contact-form').reset();
};
function removeValidationClasses() {
jQuery('.control-group').removeClass('success').removeClass('error');
};
function changeHeaderToAdd() {
document.getElementById('contactModalLabel').innerText = 'Add Contact';
};
function changeHeaderToUpdate() {
document.getElementById('contactModalLabel').innerText = 'Update Contact';
};
function clearContactId() {
document.getElementById('contactId').value = '';
};
var ab = document.getElementById('addContactBtn');
if (ab.addEventListener) {
ab.addEventListener('click', resetValidation, false);
ab.addEventListener('click', resetFormFields, false);
ab.addEventListener('click', removeValidationClasses, false);
ab.addEventListener('click', changeHeaderToAdd, false);
ab.addEventListener('click', clearContactId, false);
} else {
ab.attachEvent('onclick', resetValidation);
ab.attachEvent('onclick', resetFormFields);
ab.attachEvent('onclick', removeValidationClasses);
ab.attachEvent('onclick', changeHeaderToAdd);
ab.attachEvent('onclick', clearContactId);
};
var ub = document.getElementById('updateContactBtn');
if (ub.addEventListener) {
ub.addEventListener('click', resetValidation, false);
ub.addEventListener('click', resetFormFields, false);
ub.addEventListener('click', removeValidationClasses, false);
ub.addEventListener('click', changeHeaderToUpdate, false);
} else {
ub.attachEvent('onclick', resetValidation);
ub.attachEvent('onclick', resetFormFields);
ub.attachEvent('onclick', removeValidationClasses);
ub.attachEvent('onclick', changeHeaderToUpdate);
};
});
</script>
Solved!
The JS was fine. However, since #updateContactBtn was created dynamically (one for each contact on the page), the problem was caused by the presence of nonunique id's. Only the first instance of #updateContactBtn worked.
I changed #updateContactBtn to .updateContactBtn.
I got this very weird code: No debug, no work! I am almost crazy about it.
The code is to show an notification in Chrome. That's lot of comments among the code.
Look at the !!IMPORTANT&&WEIRD!!, next line is "console.log(_notification);" that can't be omitted, if it does, no events bind could work.
Though now the code works OK, but I just curious about this, why I can't remove "console.log(_notification);" ?
/**
* Notification
* #author: ijse
* #require: Chrome10+
* #params: same as webkitNotifications.create[HTML]Notification()
* #usage:
* new Notify("http://www.baidu.com").onshow(function() {
* alert("show");
* }).onclose(function() {
* alert("close");
* }).show();
*/
var Notify = function() {
var _params = arguments;
// Validate arguments
if(_params.length == 0) {
console.error("Notify need at least one argument");
return ;
}
// Check browser support
if(!window.webkitNotifications) {
console.error("Your browser does not support webkitNotifications feature!!");
return ;
}
var _onclose, _onclick, _onerror, _onshow;
var _notification, _replaceId, _showFlag = false;
function bindEvents() {
// Add event listeners
// In W3C, display event is called show
_notification.addEventListener("display", _onshow, false);
_notification.addEventListener("click", _onclick, false);
_notification.addEventListener("error", _onerror, false);
_notification.addEventListener("close", _onclose, false);
if(_replaceId)
_notification.replaceId = _replaceId;
// !!IMPORTANT&&WEIRD!! remove next line no events will work
console.log(_notification);
}
function createfn(permission) {
// About permission on Chrome:
// PERMISSION_ALLOWED (0) indicates that the user has granted permission to scripts with this origin to show notifications.
// PERMISSION_NOT_ALLOWED (1) indicates that the user has not taken an action regarding notifications for scripts from this origin.
// PERMISSION_DENIED (2) indicates that the user has explicitly blocked scripts with this origin from showing notifications.
if(permission == 0) {
// If permission is allowed
// Create notification
if(_params.length == 1)
_notification = window.webkitNotifications.createHTMLNotification(_params[0]);
else
_notification = window.webkitNotifications.createNotification(_params[0],_params[1],_params[2]);
// Bind events
console.log("bind event in createfn");
bindEvents();
// Show, if yes flag
!!_showFlag && _notification.show();
} else {
if(_onerror)
_onerror.call(this);
console.error("Notification permission is denied!!");
}
}
// If permission already allowed, do not require again
if(window.webkitNotifications.checkPermission() != 0) {
// Require permission from user
window.webkitNotifications.requestPermission(function() {
createfn.call(this, window.webkitNotifications.checkPermission());
});
} else {
createfn.call(this, window.webkitNotifications.checkPermission());
}
// Return handler methods
return {
onclose: function(fn) { _onclose = fn; console.log(1); return this; },
onclick: function(fn) { _onclick = fn; console.log(2); return this; },
onerror: function(fn) { _onerror = fn; console.log(3); return this; },
onshow : function(fn) { _onshow = fn; console.log(4); return this; },
show: function(replaceId) {
console.log("method show");
_replaceId = replaceId;
if(_notification) {
// Notification already been created
bindEvents();
_notification.show();
} else {
// Flag yes to show
_showFlag = true;
}
return _notification;
},
cancel: function() {
_notification.cancel();
}
} // return handler
}
new Notify("","Success!!", "Welcome to use empcy!!").onshow(function() {
var that = this;
window.setTimeout(function() { that.cancel(); }, 3000);
}).onclose(function() {
alert("close");
}).onclick(function() {
alert("clicked");
}).show("Welcome");
I think it might be an issue with bracketing. Here is the relevant section of code as you have it:
function bindEvents() {
// Add event listeners
// In W3C, display event is called show
_notification.addEventListener("display", _onshow, false);
_notification.addEventListener("click", _onclick, false);
_notification.addEventListener("error", _onerror, false);
_notification.addEventListener("close", _onclose, false);
if(_replaceId)
_notification.replaceId = _replaceId;
// !!IMPORTANT&&WEIRD!! remove next line no events will work
console.log(_notification);
}
If you remove the console.log line it becomes:
function bindEvents() {
// Add event listeners
// In W3C, display event is called show
_notification.addEventListener("display", _onshow, false);
_notification.addEventListener("click", _onclick, false);
_notification.addEventListener("error", _onerror, false);
_notification.addEventListener("close", _onclose, false);
if(_replaceId)
_notification.replaceId = _replaceId;
}
which is probably confusing the JavaScript engine since you have a bracket-less if statement but it's followed by a closing bracket. You should try adding brackets to your if statement so it looks like:
function bindEvents() {
// Add event listeners
// In W3C, display event is called show
_notification.addEventListener("display", _onshow, false);
_notification.addEventListener("click", _onclick, false);
_notification.addEventListener("error", _onerror, false);
_notification.addEventListener("close", _onclose, false);
if(_replaceId) {
_notification.replaceId = _replaceId;
}
}
maybe you could include the following code
https://github.com/h5bp/html5-boilerplate/blob/master/js/plugins.js
this is taken from the html5-boilerplate project an check's if console.log can be called.
Eventually, I didn't work it out, and find no answers for that. I just put that code and it works well, except print a log information.