I'm trying to figure out the best way to access an <iframe>
element's window
and document
properties from a parent page. The <iframe>
may be created via JavaScript or accessed via a reference stored in an object property or a variable, so, if I understand correctly, that rules out the use of document.frames
.
I've seen this done a number of ways, but I'm unsure about the best approach. Given an <iframe>
created in this way:
var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0].appendChild(iframe);
I'm currently using this to access the document
, and it seems to work OK across the major browsers:
var doc = iframe.contentWindow || iframe.contentDocument;
if (doc.document) {
doc = doc.document;
}
I've also see this approach:
var iframe = document.getElementById('my_iframe');
ifra开发者_开发问答me = (iframe.contentWindow) ? iframe.contentWindow :
(iframe.contentDocument.document) ? iframe.contentDocument.document :
iframe.contentDocument;
iframe.document.open();
iframe.document.write('Hello World!');
iframe.document.close();
That confuses me, since it seems that if iframe.contentDocument.document
is defined, you're going to end up trying to access iframe.contentDocument.document.document
.
There's also this:
var frame_ref = document.getElementsByTagName('iframe')[0];
var iframe_doc = frame_ref.contentWindow ? frame_ref.contentWindow.document :
frame_ref.contentDocument;
In the end, I guess I'm confused as to which properties hold which properties, whether contentDocument
is equivalent to document
or whether there is such a property as contentDocument.document
, etc.
Can anyone point me to an accurate/timely reference on these properties, or give a quick briefing on how to efficiently access an <iframe>
's window
and document
properties in a cross-browser way (without the use of jQuery or other libraries)?
Thanks for any help!
There's an easier way that's been around longer... use window.frames
to get a reference to the frame's window object.
By name or id:
var iframe_doc = window.frames.my_iframe.document;
or if you prefer:
var iframe_doc = window.frames['my_iframe'].document;
or by index:
var iframe_doc = window.frames[0].document;
Good reference for window.frames
here: http://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/window.frames
An excerpt:
each item in the window.frames pseudo-array represents the window object corresponding to the given <frame>'s or <iframe>'s content, not the (i)frame DOM element (i.e. window.frames[ 0 ] is the same thing as document.getElementsByTagName( "iframe" )[ 0 ].contentWindow)
During the time I made many tests, and finally came up with this short but robust syntax which works on every browser I could test:
var doc = iframe.contentDocument ?
iframe.contentDocument : (iframe.contentWindow.document || iframe.document);
EDIT: @DaggNabbit noticed that a reference error in iframe.contentWindow.document
, if iframe.contentWindow
is not set, would block the code execution, not allowing iframe.document
to be returned.
So I refined my code:
var doc = iframe.contentDocument ?
iframe.contentDocument :
(iframe.contentWindow ? iframe.contentWindow.document : iframe.document);
NOTE: iframe.document
is a workaround for IE5.
all of the modern browsers except Chrome support both iframereference.contentWindow
and iframereference.contentDocument
, but only if the page opened in the iframe is on the same domain as the page containing the iframe.
To include Chrome, use var iwin=iframereference.contentWindow,
idoc=iwin.document;
.contentDocument
is the window.document
of the page in the iframe,
as is contentWindow.document
, but not .contentDocument.document
.
Chrome may include support for .contentDocument
in some future version- I hope so, because it is also the way all the other browsers find the document contained in an Object element, type text/html
, where the data attribute is the url of an html page.
i think this is a very easy and cross browser way
//get document object of IFRAME
if(typeof frame.contentDocument!='undefined') {
iframeDocument=frame.contentDocument;
} else {
iframeDocument=frame.document;
}
//get window object of IFRAME
if(typeof frame.contentWindow!='undefined') {
iframeWindow=frame.contentWindow;
} else {
iframeWindow=frame.window;
}
you can test it
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