Is开发者_JAVA百科 there any other way to write javascript:false
that is more pleasant?
I'm building a print functionality for an intranet app (for IE6) and I make the printed page using an iframe:
$('body').append('<iframe id="printIFrame" src="javascript:false"></iframe>');
$("#printIFrame").attr('style','position:absolute;left:-500px;top:-500px;');
Without having javascript:false
in the src, I'll get the "This page contains both secure and nonsecure items" popup when I create it. However the downside of this is that "javascript:false" gets printed as the title on the bottom left of each page (instead of about:blank or something more useful).
Is there some kind of javascript technique that I can write javascript:false
but in cleaner terms? I tried something like this
var PrintOut = false;
$('body').append('<iframe id="printIFrame" src="PrintOut"></iframe>');
But I couldn't get that working. Any other ideas?
How about an existing, but empty, resource using the same protocol?
<iframe id="printIFrame" src="https://example.com/empty.html"></iframe>
You could, to make it perfect, even have empty.html
send a 204 No Content
header to signify it's empty. (Info here)
In order to avoid unwanted requests you have to use <iframe src="about:blank"></iframe>
I think you should use a "/blank.do" or something from the same server (or origin, rather) as (temporary?) src for your iframe. Then you should not get the "insecure" stuff.
Why do you want/need it to be done by javascript?
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