Related
I would like to reload an <iframe> using JavaScript. The best way I found until now was set the iframe’s src attribute to itself, but this isn’t very clean. Any ideas?
document.getElementById('some_frame_id').contentWindow.location.reload();
be careful, in Firefox, window.frames[] cannot be indexed by id, but by name or index
document.getElementById('iframeid').src = document.getElementById('iframeid').src
It will reload the iframe, even across domains!
Tested with IE7/8, Firefox and Chrome.
Note: As mentioned by #user85461, this approach doesn't work if the iframe src URL has a hash in it (e.g. http://example.com/#something).
If using jQuery, this seems to work:
$('#your_iframe').attr('src', $('#your_iframe').attr('src'));
Appending an empty string to the src attribute of the iFrame also reloads it automatically.
document.getElementById('id').src += '';
window.frames['frameNameOrIndex'].location.reload();
Because of the same origin policy, this won't work when modifying an iframe pointing to a different domain. If you can target newer browsers, consider using HTML5's Cross-document messaging. You view the browsers that support this feature here: http://caniuse.com/#feat=x-doc-messaging.
If you can't use HTML5 functionality, then you can follow the tricks outlined here: http://softwareas.com/cross-domain-communication-with-iframes. That blog entry also does a good job of defining the problem.
I've just come up against this in chrome and the only thing that worked was removing and replacing the iframe. Example:
$(".iframe_wrapper").find("iframe").remove();
var iframe = $('<iframe src="' + src + '" frameborder="0"></iframe>');
$.find(".iframe_wrapper").append(iframe);
Pretty simple, not covered in the other answers.
Simply replacing the src attribute of the iframe element was not satisfactory in my case because one would see the old content until the new page is loaded. This works better if you want to give instant visual feedback:
var url = iframeEl.src;
iframeEl.src = 'about:blank';
setTimeout(function() {
iframeEl.src = url;
}, 10);
A refinement on yajra's post ... I like the thought, but hate the idea of browser detection.
I rather take ppk's view of using object detection instead of browser detection,
(http://www.quirksmode.org/js/support.html),
because then you're actually testing the capabilities of the browser and acting accordingly, rather than what you think the browser is capable of at that time. Also doesn't require so much ugly browser ID string parsing, and doesn't exclude perfectly capable browsers of which you know nothing about.
So, instead of looking at navigator.AppName, why not do something like this, actually testing for the elements you use? (You could use try {} blocks if you want to get even fancier, but this worked for me.)
function reload_message_frame() {
var frame_id = 'live_message_frame';
if(window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src){
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src = window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src;
} else {
// fail condition, respond as appropriate, or do nothing
alert("Sorry, unable to reload that frame!");
}
}
This way, you can go try as many different permutations as you like or is necessary, without causing javascript errors, and do something sensible if all else fails. It's a little more work to test for your objects before using them, but, IMO, makes for better and more failsafe code.
Worked for me in IE8, Firefox (15.0.1), Chrome (21.0.1180.89 m), and Opera (12.0.2) on Windows.
Maybe I could do even better by actually testing for the reload function, but that's enough for me right now. :)
for new url
location.assign("http:google.com");
The assign() method loads a new document.
reload
location.reload();
The reload() method is used to reload the current document.
Another solution.
const frame = document.getElementById("my-iframe");
frame.parentNode.replaceChild(frame.cloneNode(), frame);
Now to make this work on chrome 66, try this:
const reloadIframe = (iframeId) => {
const el = document.getElementById(iframeId)
const src = el.src
el.src = ''
setTimeout(() => {
el.src = src
})
}
In IE8 using .Net, setting the iframe.src for the first time is ok,
but setting the iframe.src for the second time is not raising the page_load of the iframed page.
To solve it i used iframe.contentDocument.location.href = "NewUrl.htm".
Discover it when used jQuery thickBox and tried to reopen same page in the thickbox iframe.
Then it just showed the earlier page that was opened.
Use reload for IE and set src for other browsers. (reload does not work on FF)
tested on IE 7,8,9 and Firefox
if(navigator.appName == "Microsoft Internet Explorer"){
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').contentWindow.location.reload(true);
}else {
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src = window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src;
}
If you using Jquery then there is one line code.
$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src'));
and if you are working with same parent then
$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src'));
Using self.location.reload() will reload the iframe.
<iframe src="https://vivekkumar11432.wordpress.com/" width="300" height="300"></iframe>
<br><br>
<input type='button' value="Reload" onclick="self.location.reload();" />
<script type="text/javascript">
top.frames['DetailFrame'].location = top.frames['DetailFrame'].location;
</script>
If all of the above doesn't work for you:
window.location.reload();
This for some reason refreshed my iframe instead of the whole script. Maybe because it is placed in the frame itself, while all those getElemntById solutions work when you try to refresh a frame from another frame?
Or I don't understand this fully and talk gibberish, anyways this worked for me like a charm :)
Have you considered appending to the url a meaningless query string parameter?
<iframe src="myBaseURL.com/something/" />
<script>
var i = document.getElementsById("iframe")[0],
src = i.src,
number = 1;
//For an update
i.src = src + "?ignoreMe=" + number;
number++;
</script>
It won't be seen & if you are aware of the parameter being safe then it should be fine.
Reload from inside Iframe
If your app is inside an Iframe you can refresh it with replacing the location href:
document.location.href = document.location.href
If you tried all of the other suggestions, and couldn't get any of them to work (like I couldn't), here's something you can try that may be useful.
HTML
<a class="refresh-this-frame" rel="#iframe-id-0">Refresh</a>
<iframe src="" id="iframe-id-0"></iframe>
JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var thisIframe = $(this).attr('rel');
var currentState = $(thisIframe).attr('src');
function removeSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', currentState);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
});
I initially set out to try and save some time with RWD and cross-browser testing. I wanted to create a quick page that housed a bunch of iframes, organized into groups that I would show/hide at will. Logically you'd want to be able to easily and quickly refresh any given frame.
I should note that the project I am working on currently, the one in use in this test-bed, is a one-page site with indexed locations (e.g. index.html#home). That may have had something to do with why I couldn't get any of the other solutions to refresh my particular frame.
Having said that, I know it's not the cleanest thing in the world, but it works for my purposes. Hope this helps someone. Now if only I could figure out how to keep the iframe from scrolling the parent page each time there's animation inside iframe...
EDIT:
I realized that this doesn't "refresh" the iframe like I'd hoped it would. It will reload the iframe's initial source though. Still can't figure out why I couldn't get any of the other options to work..
UPDATE:
The reason I couldn't get any of the other methods to work is because I was testing them in Chrome, and Chrome won't allow you to access an iframe's content (Explanation: Is it likely that future releases of Chrome support contentWindow/contentDocument when iFrame loads a local html file from local html file?) if it doesn't originate from the same location (so far as I understand it). Upon further testing, I can't access contentWindow in FF either.
AMENDED JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var targetID = $(this).attr('rel');
var targetSrc = $(targetID).attr('src');
var cleanID = targetID.replace("#","");
var chromeTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Chrome/g) ? true : false );
var FFTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Firefox/g) ? true : false );
if (chromeTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (FFTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (chromeTest == false && FFTest == false) {
var targetLoc = (document.getElementById(cleanID).contentWindow.location).toString();
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc2() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetLoc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc2, 200);
}
});
For debugging purposes one could open the console, change the execution context to the frame that he wants refreshed, and do document.location.reload()
I had a problem with this because I didnt use a timeout to give the page time to update, I set the src to '', and then set it back to the original url, but nothing happened:
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
but it didnt reload the site, because it is single threaded, the first change doesnt do anything, because that function is still taking up the thread, and then it sets it back to the original url, and I guess chrome doesnt reload because preformance or whatever, so you need to do:
function setBack() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
setTimeout(setBack,100);
}
if the setTimeout time is too short, it doesnt work, so if its not working, try set it to 500 or something and see if it works then.
this was in the latest version of chrome at the time of writing this.
This way avoids adding history to some browsers (an unneeded overhead). In the body section put:
<div id='IF'>
<iframe src='https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=Memphis%20TN%20Temperature'
style="width:5in; height:6in" // or whatever you want in your Iframe
title'Temperature'></iframe>
</div>
Then in some JAVASCRIPT you may have a function like:
function UPdate() { // Iframe
T1=document.getElementById('IF')
T2=T1.innerHTML
T1.innerHTML=T2
}
I would like to reload an <iframe> using JavaScript. The best way I found until now was set the iframe’s src attribute to itself, but this isn’t very clean. Any ideas?
document.getElementById('some_frame_id').contentWindow.location.reload();
be careful, in Firefox, window.frames[] cannot be indexed by id, but by name or index
document.getElementById('iframeid').src = document.getElementById('iframeid').src
It will reload the iframe, even across domains!
Tested with IE7/8, Firefox and Chrome.
Note: As mentioned by #user85461, this approach doesn't work if the iframe src URL has a hash in it (e.g. http://example.com/#something).
If using jQuery, this seems to work:
$('#your_iframe').attr('src', $('#your_iframe').attr('src'));
Appending an empty string to the src attribute of the iFrame also reloads it automatically.
document.getElementById('id').src += '';
window.frames['frameNameOrIndex'].location.reload();
Because of the same origin policy, this won't work when modifying an iframe pointing to a different domain. If you can target newer browsers, consider using HTML5's Cross-document messaging. You view the browsers that support this feature here: http://caniuse.com/#feat=x-doc-messaging.
If you can't use HTML5 functionality, then you can follow the tricks outlined here: http://softwareas.com/cross-domain-communication-with-iframes. That blog entry also does a good job of defining the problem.
I've just come up against this in chrome and the only thing that worked was removing and replacing the iframe. Example:
$(".iframe_wrapper").find("iframe").remove();
var iframe = $('<iframe src="' + src + '" frameborder="0"></iframe>');
$.find(".iframe_wrapper").append(iframe);
Pretty simple, not covered in the other answers.
Simply replacing the src attribute of the iframe element was not satisfactory in my case because one would see the old content until the new page is loaded. This works better if you want to give instant visual feedback:
var url = iframeEl.src;
iframeEl.src = 'about:blank';
setTimeout(function() {
iframeEl.src = url;
}, 10);
A refinement on yajra's post ... I like the thought, but hate the idea of browser detection.
I rather take ppk's view of using object detection instead of browser detection,
(http://www.quirksmode.org/js/support.html),
because then you're actually testing the capabilities of the browser and acting accordingly, rather than what you think the browser is capable of at that time. Also doesn't require so much ugly browser ID string parsing, and doesn't exclude perfectly capable browsers of which you know nothing about.
So, instead of looking at navigator.AppName, why not do something like this, actually testing for the elements you use? (You could use try {} blocks if you want to get even fancier, but this worked for me.)
function reload_message_frame() {
var frame_id = 'live_message_frame';
if(window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src){
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src = window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src;
} else {
// fail condition, respond as appropriate, or do nothing
alert("Sorry, unable to reload that frame!");
}
}
This way, you can go try as many different permutations as you like or is necessary, without causing javascript errors, and do something sensible if all else fails. It's a little more work to test for your objects before using them, but, IMO, makes for better and more failsafe code.
Worked for me in IE8, Firefox (15.0.1), Chrome (21.0.1180.89 m), and Opera (12.0.2) on Windows.
Maybe I could do even better by actually testing for the reload function, but that's enough for me right now. :)
for new url
location.assign("http:google.com");
The assign() method loads a new document.
reload
location.reload();
The reload() method is used to reload the current document.
Another solution.
const frame = document.getElementById("my-iframe");
frame.parentNode.replaceChild(frame.cloneNode(), frame);
Now to make this work on chrome 66, try this:
const reloadIframe = (iframeId) => {
const el = document.getElementById(iframeId)
const src = el.src
el.src = ''
setTimeout(() => {
el.src = src
})
}
In IE8 using .Net, setting the iframe.src for the first time is ok,
but setting the iframe.src for the second time is not raising the page_load of the iframed page.
To solve it i used iframe.contentDocument.location.href = "NewUrl.htm".
Discover it when used jQuery thickBox and tried to reopen same page in the thickbox iframe.
Then it just showed the earlier page that was opened.
Use reload for IE and set src for other browsers. (reload does not work on FF)
tested on IE 7,8,9 and Firefox
if(navigator.appName == "Microsoft Internet Explorer"){
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').contentWindow.location.reload(true);
}else {
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src = window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src;
}
If you using Jquery then there is one line code.
$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src'));
and if you are working with same parent then
$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src'));
Using self.location.reload() will reload the iframe.
<iframe src="https://vivekkumar11432.wordpress.com/" width="300" height="300"></iframe>
<br><br>
<input type='button' value="Reload" onclick="self.location.reload();" />
<script type="text/javascript">
top.frames['DetailFrame'].location = top.frames['DetailFrame'].location;
</script>
If all of the above doesn't work for you:
window.location.reload();
This for some reason refreshed my iframe instead of the whole script. Maybe because it is placed in the frame itself, while all those getElemntById solutions work when you try to refresh a frame from another frame?
Or I don't understand this fully and talk gibberish, anyways this worked for me like a charm :)
Have you considered appending to the url a meaningless query string parameter?
<iframe src="myBaseURL.com/something/" />
<script>
var i = document.getElementsById("iframe")[0],
src = i.src,
number = 1;
//For an update
i.src = src + "?ignoreMe=" + number;
number++;
</script>
It won't be seen & if you are aware of the parameter being safe then it should be fine.
Reload from inside Iframe
If your app is inside an Iframe you can refresh it with replacing the location href:
document.location.href = document.location.href
If you tried all of the other suggestions, and couldn't get any of them to work (like I couldn't), here's something you can try that may be useful.
HTML
<a class="refresh-this-frame" rel="#iframe-id-0">Refresh</a>
<iframe src="" id="iframe-id-0"></iframe>
JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var thisIframe = $(this).attr('rel');
var currentState = $(thisIframe).attr('src');
function removeSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', currentState);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
});
I initially set out to try and save some time with RWD and cross-browser testing. I wanted to create a quick page that housed a bunch of iframes, organized into groups that I would show/hide at will. Logically you'd want to be able to easily and quickly refresh any given frame.
I should note that the project I am working on currently, the one in use in this test-bed, is a one-page site with indexed locations (e.g. index.html#home). That may have had something to do with why I couldn't get any of the other solutions to refresh my particular frame.
Having said that, I know it's not the cleanest thing in the world, but it works for my purposes. Hope this helps someone. Now if only I could figure out how to keep the iframe from scrolling the parent page each time there's animation inside iframe...
EDIT:
I realized that this doesn't "refresh" the iframe like I'd hoped it would. It will reload the iframe's initial source though. Still can't figure out why I couldn't get any of the other options to work..
UPDATE:
The reason I couldn't get any of the other methods to work is because I was testing them in Chrome, and Chrome won't allow you to access an iframe's content (Explanation: Is it likely that future releases of Chrome support contentWindow/contentDocument when iFrame loads a local html file from local html file?) if it doesn't originate from the same location (so far as I understand it). Upon further testing, I can't access contentWindow in FF either.
AMENDED JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var targetID = $(this).attr('rel');
var targetSrc = $(targetID).attr('src');
var cleanID = targetID.replace("#","");
var chromeTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Chrome/g) ? true : false );
var FFTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Firefox/g) ? true : false );
if (chromeTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (FFTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (chromeTest == false && FFTest == false) {
var targetLoc = (document.getElementById(cleanID).contentWindow.location).toString();
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc2() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetLoc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc2, 200);
}
});
For debugging purposes one could open the console, change the execution context to the frame that he wants refreshed, and do document.location.reload()
I had a problem with this because I didnt use a timeout to give the page time to update, I set the src to '', and then set it back to the original url, but nothing happened:
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
but it didnt reload the site, because it is single threaded, the first change doesnt do anything, because that function is still taking up the thread, and then it sets it back to the original url, and I guess chrome doesnt reload because preformance or whatever, so you need to do:
function setBack() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
setTimeout(setBack,100);
}
if the setTimeout time is too short, it doesnt work, so if its not working, try set it to 500 or something and see if it works then.
this was in the latest version of chrome at the time of writing this.
This way avoids adding history to some browsers (an unneeded overhead). In the body section put:
<div id='IF'>
<iframe src='https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=Memphis%20TN%20Temperature'
style="width:5in; height:6in" // or whatever you want in your Iframe
title'Temperature'></iframe>
</div>
Then in some JAVASCRIPT you may have a function like:
function UPdate() { // Iframe
T1=document.getElementById('IF')
T2=T1.innerHTML
T1.innerHTML=T2
}
An external JavaScript adds a DOM element to a page.
Using JavaScript or JQuery how do I determine when this DOM element is added to the page?
You basically have three choices, one of which isn't available on all browsers:
Get a notification from the other script that it's added an element (if it provides one)
Poll (I'd use setTimeout and reschedule each following check on purpose) to see if the element appears. E.g.:
var CHECK_INTERVAL = 100; 100 = 1/10th second, choose appropriate
function checkForElement() {
/* ...check for the element... */
if (/*...you found the element...*/) {
// Do something with it
}
else {
// Check again after a brief pause
setTimeout(checkForElement, CHECK_INTERVAL);
}
}
setTimeout(checkForElement, CHECK_INTERVAL);
Use a mutation observer, which is the replacement for the broken old mutation events. This lets you register a callback to be called on certain mutation events. Support is reasonable but — quelle shock — IE didn't get them until IE11.
If you have access to that external javascript file, you can just call a function in your page from that file just after you add an element. If you don't have this facility or there is not event triggering in between, you can keep on checking existence of such element in a certain interval using javascript setInterval() method.
var chekElement = function (){
// this will rerun function every second
var chekElemRecursiveTimer = setTimeout(chekElement, 1000);
var someElement = $('.someElement');
if (someElement){
alert("its on page!");
clearTimeout(chekElemRecursiveTimer);
}
}
// run function in page or from external js file
chekElement();
another way to checked this
var chekForElement = function (){
var chekElementTimer = setTimeout(chekForElement, 1000);
if ($('.chcekedElementclass').length > 0){
alert("found in page");
clearTimeout(chekElemRecursiveTimer);
}
}
// run function in page or from external js file
chekForElement();
I am writing javascript to my web pages, but there is a number of functions and loops, that i think are running in all pages, so the first one is running and failing on the second page. Because of this, the javascript function on the second page is not running.
Can anyone give me an idea of how to create page-specific functions or check the availability of an id? I don't use any frameworks.
thanks in advance.
my javascript code is :
window.onload = function(){
var yellows = document.getElementById('magazine-brief').getElementsByTagName('h2');
var signUp = document.getElementById('signup-link');
function animeYellowBar(num){
setTimeout(function(){
yellows[num].style.left = "0";
if(num == yellows.length-1){
setTimeout(function(){
signUp.style.webkitTransform = "scale(1)";
},num * 250);
}
}, num * 500);
}
for (var i = 0; i < yellows.length; i++){
animeYellowBar(i);
}
alert("alert second page");
}
in this code, the alert message not working on second page. any idea?
If I understand you correctly, you have a javascript function, that you want to attach to an event from a specific div element in your page.
a) Include an event directly to you HTML page, something like this:
<div id="element" onclick="some_function();">Text is here</div>
b) Use a javascript function (add this code between <script> tag):
window.onload = function() {
document.getElementById("element").setAttribute("onclick", "some_function()")
}
The best way would be to only include those scripts on the pages which need them. Why waste time loading and parsing scripts you don't need?
If you must keep them on every page, put your functions in an if statement and check for something unique to the page that needs them (such as a form element or field ID).
Update
In response to your comment:
You have to code more defensively. You are attempting to make use of the magazine-brief and signup-link elements before you have made certain that they exist. Never trust that the proper element was returned - always check that it was before attempting to use that element.
I suggest checking your vars like so:
var yellows = document.getElementById('magazine-brief').getElementsByTagName('h2');
var signUp = document.getElementById('signup-link');
if (yellows != 'undefined' && signUp != undefined)
{
function animeYellowBar(num)
{
//...
}
}
I would like to reload an <iframe> using JavaScript. The best way I found until now was set the iframe’s src attribute to itself, but this isn’t very clean. Any ideas?
document.getElementById('some_frame_id').contentWindow.location.reload();
be careful, in Firefox, window.frames[] cannot be indexed by id, but by name or index
document.getElementById('iframeid').src = document.getElementById('iframeid').src
It will reload the iframe, even across domains!
Tested with IE7/8, Firefox and Chrome.
Note: As mentioned by #user85461, this approach doesn't work if the iframe src URL has a hash in it (e.g. http://example.com/#something).
If using jQuery, this seems to work:
$('#your_iframe').attr('src', $('#your_iframe').attr('src'));
Appending an empty string to the src attribute of the iFrame also reloads it automatically.
document.getElementById('id').src += '';
window.frames['frameNameOrIndex'].location.reload();
Because of the same origin policy, this won't work when modifying an iframe pointing to a different domain. If you can target newer browsers, consider using HTML5's Cross-document messaging. You view the browsers that support this feature here: http://caniuse.com/#feat=x-doc-messaging.
If you can't use HTML5 functionality, then you can follow the tricks outlined here: http://softwareas.com/cross-domain-communication-with-iframes. That blog entry also does a good job of defining the problem.
I've just come up against this in chrome and the only thing that worked was removing and replacing the iframe. Example:
$(".iframe_wrapper").find("iframe").remove();
var iframe = $('<iframe src="' + src + '" frameborder="0"></iframe>');
$.find(".iframe_wrapper").append(iframe);
Pretty simple, not covered in the other answers.
Simply replacing the src attribute of the iframe element was not satisfactory in my case because one would see the old content until the new page is loaded. This works better if you want to give instant visual feedback:
var url = iframeEl.src;
iframeEl.src = 'about:blank';
setTimeout(function() {
iframeEl.src = url;
}, 10);
A refinement on yajra's post ... I like the thought, but hate the idea of browser detection.
I rather take ppk's view of using object detection instead of browser detection,
(http://www.quirksmode.org/js/support.html),
because then you're actually testing the capabilities of the browser and acting accordingly, rather than what you think the browser is capable of at that time. Also doesn't require so much ugly browser ID string parsing, and doesn't exclude perfectly capable browsers of which you know nothing about.
So, instead of looking at navigator.AppName, why not do something like this, actually testing for the elements you use? (You could use try {} blocks if you want to get even fancier, but this worked for me.)
function reload_message_frame() {
var frame_id = 'live_message_frame';
if(window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location ) {
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).contentWindow.location.reload(true);
} else if (window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src){
window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src = window.document.getElementById(frame_id).src;
} else {
// fail condition, respond as appropriate, or do nothing
alert("Sorry, unable to reload that frame!");
}
}
This way, you can go try as many different permutations as you like or is necessary, without causing javascript errors, and do something sensible if all else fails. It's a little more work to test for your objects before using them, but, IMO, makes for better and more failsafe code.
Worked for me in IE8, Firefox (15.0.1), Chrome (21.0.1180.89 m), and Opera (12.0.2) on Windows.
Maybe I could do even better by actually testing for the reload function, but that's enough for me right now. :)
for new url
location.assign("http:google.com");
The assign() method loads a new document.
reload
location.reload();
The reload() method is used to reload the current document.
Another solution.
const frame = document.getElementById("my-iframe");
frame.parentNode.replaceChild(frame.cloneNode(), frame);
Now to make this work on chrome 66, try this:
const reloadIframe = (iframeId) => {
const el = document.getElementById(iframeId)
const src = el.src
el.src = ''
setTimeout(() => {
el.src = src
})
}
In IE8 using .Net, setting the iframe.src for the first time is ok,
but setting the iframe.src for the second time is not raising the page_load of the iframed page.
To solve it i used iframe.contentDocument.location.href = "NewUrl.htm".
Discover it when used jQuery thickBox and tried to reopen same page in the thickbox iframe.
Then it just showed the earlier page that was opened.
Use reload for IE and set src for other browsers. (reload does not work on FF)
tested on IE 7,8,9 and Firefox
if(navigator.appName == "Microsoft Internet Explorer"){
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').contentWindow.location.reload(true);
}else {
window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src = window.document.getElementById('iframeId').src;
}
If you using Jquery then there is one line code.
$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',window.parent.document).attr('src'));
and if you are working with same parent then
$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src',$('#iframeID',parent.document).attr('src'));
Using self.location.reload() will reload the iframe.
<iframe src="https://vivekkumar11432.wordpress.com/" width="300" height="300"></iframe>
<br><br>
<input type='button' value="Reload" onclick="self.location.reload();" />
<script type="text/javascript">
top.frames['DetailFrame'].location = top.frames['DetailFrame'].location;
</script>
If all of the above doesn't work for you:
window.location.reload();
This for some reason refreshed my iframe instead of the whole script. Maybe because it is placed in the frame itself, while all those getElemntById solutions work when you try to refresh a frame from another frame?
Or I don't understand this fully and talk gibberish, anyways this worked for me like a charm :)
Have you considered appending to the url a meaningless query string parameter?
<iframe src="myBaseURL.com/something/" />
<script>
var i = document.getElementsById("iframe")[0],
src = i.src,
number = 1;
//For an update
i.src = src + "?ignoreMe=" + number;
number++;
</script>
It won't be seen & if you are aware of the parameter being safe then it should be fine.
Reload from inside Iframe
If your app is inside an Iframe you can refresh it with replacing the location href:
document.location.href = document.location.href
If you tried all of the other suggestions, and couldn't get any of them to work (like I couldn't), here's something you can try that may be useful.
HTML
<a class="refresh-this-frame" rel="#iframe-id-0">Refresh</a>
<iframe src="" id="iframe-id-0"></iframe>
JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var thisIframe = $(this).attr('rel');
var currentState = $(thisIframe).attr('src');
function removeSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(thisIframe).attr('src', currentState);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
});
I initially set out to try and save some time with RWD and cross-browser testing. I wanted to create a quick page that housed a bunch of iframes, organized into groups that I would show/hide at will. Logically you'd want to be able to easily and quickly refresh any given frame.
I should note that the project I am working on currently, the one in use in this test-bed, is a one-page site with indexed locations (e.g. index.html#home). That may have had something to do with why I couldn't get any of the other solutions to refresh my particular frame.
Having said that, I know it's not the cleanest thing in the world, but it works for my purposes. Hope this helps someone. Now if only I could figure out how to keep the iframe from scrolling the parent page each time there's animation inside iframe...
EDIT:
I realized that this doesn't "refresh" the iframe like I'd hoped it would. It will reload the iframe's initial source though. Still can't figure out why I couldn't get any of the other options to work..
UPDATE:
The reason I couldn't get any of the other methods to work is because I was testing them in Chrome, and Chrome won't allow you to access an iframe's content (Explanation: Is it likely that future releases of Chrome support contentWindow/contentDocument when iFrame loads a local html file from local html file?) if it doesn't originate from the same location (so far as I understand it). Upon further testing, I can't access contentWindow in FF either.
AMENDED JS
$('.refresh-this-frame').click(function() {
var targetID = $(this).attr('rel');
var targetSrc = $(targetID).attr('src');
var cleanID = targetID.replace("#","");
var chromeTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Chrome/g) ? true : false );
var FFTest = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/Firefox/g) ? true : false );
if (chromeTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (FFTest == true) {
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetSrc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc, 200);
}
if (chromeTest == false && FFTest == false) {
var targetLoc = (document.getElementById(cleanID).contentWindow.location).toString();
function removeSrc() {
$(targetID).attr('src', '');
}
setTimeout (removeSrc, 100);
function replaceSrc2() {
$(targetID).attr('src', targetLoc);
}
setTimeout (replaceSrc2, 200);
}
});
For debugging purposes one could open the console, change the execution context to the frame that he wants refreshed, and do document.location.reload()
I had a problem with this because I didnt use a timeout to give the page time to update, I set the src to '', and then set it back to the original url, but nothing happened:
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
but it didnt reload the site, because it is single threaded, the first change doesnt do anything, because that function is still taking up the thread, and then it sets it back to the original url, and I guess chrome doesnt reload because preformance or whatever, so you need to do:
function setBack() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = url;
}
function reload() {
document.getElementById('iframe').src = '';
setTimeout(setBack,100);
}
if the setTimeout time is too short, it doesnt work, so if its not working, try set it to 500 or something and see if it works then.
this was in the latest version of chrome at the time of writing this.
This way avoids adding history to some browsers (an unneeded overhead). In the body section put:
<div id='IF'>
<iframe src='https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=Memphis%20TN%20Temperature'
style="width:5in; height:6in" // or whatever you want in your Iframe
title'Temperature'></iframe>
</div>
Then in some JAVASCRIPT you may have a function like:
function UPdate() { // Iframe
T1=document.getElementById('IF')
T2=T1.innerHTML
T1.innerHTML=T2
}