I have a page with a tabbed interface. Each tab has a unique id. I've enabled links pointing to that page with the appended id after the hash, and I'm now trying to circumvent the default browser behavior that opens a URL with hash at the location of the element on the page.
So:
- pageA links to pageB like this:
<a href="pageB.php#Tab4">Go</a>
- pageB opens, and my jQuery activates the correct tab, but the browser has scrolled do开发者_高级运维wn to where
<div id="Tab4">
is located on the page.
That's exactly what I want to prevent.
Any ideas? Thanks!
There isn't a way to prevent the default hash behavior, but you can alter your hash scheme so the #tag doesn't correspond to any ID on your page. On page load, take the hash value and append a constant (ex: _hash
), then scroll to that using jQuery.
Example: http://mysite/page.php#tab4
page.php has <div id="tab4_hash"></div>
On page load, get the div by doing tab4
+ _hash
I would use this:
window.scrollTo(0,0);
This way you don't need to change element id's or anything else.
I came across the problem where I wanted to scroll down to the tab, but for some reason it scrolled past it to the bottom of the page (no, there was not a duplicate id). I think it is because the browser would scroll to the id before the content finished loading, and the extra content pushed the element above the new scroll position). I fixed it with this:
if(document.location.hash)
{
window.location = document.location.hash;
}
the "if" statement here is mandatory or you might get an infinite loop
After you're done loading the right tab, run this:
window.location = '#';
- You should just hide the element with id=hash by default
- Аnd then, after the page loads, you make the element visible.
You can find more info here: How to disable anchor "jump" when loading a page?
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