I want to implement a navigation history using jQuery and AJAX in a cross-browser manner. My a开发者_运维知识库pproach is to use window.history.pushState
and fall back to a hash url /#!/url
in browsers that do not support window.history.pushState
.
For example:
<a href="/home">home</a>
<a href="/about">about</a>
<a href="/contact">contact</a>
On browsers that support window.history.pushState
, clicking on one of these links should change address without page refresh to http://domain.com/home, http://domain.com/about etc. When the browser does not support window.history.pushState
, it should use a fragment identifier, i.e: http://domain.com/#!/home, http://domain.com/#!/about.
Update: Based on the feedback here I have implemented Ajax SEO (git) that uses
jQuery Address for HTML5 History API with old browser fallback to /#!/url
.
// Assuming the path is retreived and stored in a variable 'path'
if (typeof(window.history.pushState) == 'function') {
window.history.pushState(null, path, path);
} else {
window.location.hash = '#!' + path;
}
Something i've been using with fallback hash URL's:
History = History || {};
History.pathname = null;
History.previousHash = null;
History.hashCheckInterval = -1;
History.stack = [];
History.initialize = function () {
if (History.supportsHistoryPushState()) {
History.pathname = document.location.pathname;
$(window).bind("popstate", History.onHistoryChanged);
} else {
History.hashCheckInterval = setInterval(History.onCheckHash, 200);
}
};
History.supportsHistoryPushState = function () {
return ("pushState" in window.history) && window.history.pushState !== null;
};
History.onCheckHash = function () {
if (document.location.hash !== History.previousHash) {
History.navigateToPath(document.location.hash.slice(1));
History.previousHash = document.location.hash;
}
};
History.pushState = function (url) {
if (History.supportsHistoryPushState()) {
window.history.pushState("", "", url);
} else {
History.previousHash = url;
document.location.hash = url;
}
History.stack.push(url);
};
History.onHistoryChanged = function (event) {
if (History.supportsHistoryPushState()) {
if(History.pathname != document.location.pathname){
History.pathname = null;
History.navigateToPath(document.location.pathname);
}
}
};
History.navigateToPath = function(pathname) {
History.pushState(pathname);
// DO SOME HANDLING OF YOUR PATH HERE
};
You could bind your click events to this with:
$(function(){
$("a").click(function(){
var href = $(this).attr('href');
History.navigateToPath( href )
return false;
});
});
If you need some more explanation on this example i'll be glad to hear it.
EDIT
Please see my other answer.
It has been a while since my original answer and I would now suggest using Backbone.
An implementation could be:
// First setup a router which will be the responder for URL changes:
var AppRouter = Backbone.Router.extend({
routes: {
"*path": "load_content"
},
load_content: function(path){
$('#content').load('/' + path);
}
});
var appRouter = new AppRouter;
// Then initialize Backbone's history
Backbone.history.start({pushState: true});
Excerpt from the documentation:
To indicate that you'd like to use HTML5
pushState
support in your application, useBackbone.history.start({pushState: true})
. If you'd like to usepushState
, but have browsers that don't support it natively use full page refreshes instead, you can add{hashChange: false}
to the options.
And now every time Backbone.history.navigate
is called, the AppRouter
will perform an AJAX load of the path into the #content
div.
To handle all links with AJAX you could use the following:
$("a").on('click', function(event){
event.preventDefault();
Backbone.history.navigate( event.currentTarget.pathname, {trigger: true} )
});
Take note of the {trigger: true}
which causes the handler in the router to be called (otherwise only from url changes).
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