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The history object saves the history of the user's Internet access, starting from the moment the window is opened. Due to security considerations, developers cannot get the URL of the user's browser, but with the list of pages the user has visited, they can go back and forward without knowing the actual URL. This article will introduce in detail the history object
length
history.length property in the BOM that stores the number of URLs in the history. Initially, this value is 1. If the current window has visited three URLs, the history.length property is equal to 3
Since the IE10+ browser returns 2 initially, there is a compatibility issue, so this value is not commonly used
history.length // 初始时,该值为1 history.length // 访问三个网址后,该值为3
Jump methods
The history object provides a series of methods that allow moving between browsing history, including go(), back() and forward()
【go()】
Use the go() method to jump arbitrarily in the user's history. This method receives a parameter, an integer value representing the number of pages to jump backward or forward. Negative numbers represent jumping backward (similar to the back button), positive numbers represent jumping forward (similar to the forward button)
//后退一页 history.go(-1) //前进一页 history.go(1); //前进两页 history.go(2);
go() method None parameter, it is equivalent to history.go(0), which can refresh the current page
//刷新当前页面 history.go(); //刷新当前页面 history.go(0);
[back()]
The back() method is used to imitate the browser's Back button, equivalent to history.go(-1)
[forward()]
The forward() method is used to imitate the browser's forward button, equivalent to history.go(1)
//后退一页 history.back() //前进一页 history.forward()
If the moved position exceeds the boundary of the access history, the above three methods do not report an error, but fail silently
[Note] When using history records, Pages are usually loaded from the browser cache instead of re-asking the server to send a new web page
Add and change records
HTML5 adds two new methods to the history object, history.pushState() and history.replaceState(), used to add and modify records in the browsing history. The state attribute is used to save the record object, and the popstate event is used to monitor changes in the history object
[Note] IE9-browser does not support
[pushState()]
The history.pushState() method adds a state to the browser history. The pushState() method takes three parameters: a state object, a title (now ignored), and an optional URL address
history.pushState(state, title, url);
state object - The state object is a JavaScript object related to history created by the pushState() method. When the user is directed to a new state, the popstate event is triggered. The event's state property contains the history's state object. If you do not need this object, you can fill in null
title here - the title of the new page, but all browsers currently ignore this value, so you can fill in null
URL - this The parameter provides the address of the new history record. The new URL must be in the same domain as the current URL, otherwise pushState() will throw an exception. This parameter is optional. If it is not specifically marked, it will be set to the current URL of the document
Assume that the current URL is example.com/1.html, use the pushState method to add it to the browsing record (history object) A new record
var stateObj = { foo: 'bar' }; history.pushState(stateObj, 'page 2', '2.html');
After adding the new record above, the browser address bar immediately displays example.com/2.html, but it does not jump to 2.html, or even There is no check to see if 2.html exists, it just becomes the latest entry in your browsing history. If you visit google.com at this time, and then click the back button, the URL of the page will display 2.html, but the content will still be the original 1.html. Click the rewind button again, and the url will display 1.html, with the content unchanged
In short, the pushState method will not trigger a page refresh, but only causes the history object to change, and the displayed address in the address bar to change
If the url parameter of pushState sets a new anchor value (i.e. hash), the hashchange event will not be triggered, even if the new URL and the old one are only different in hash
If set If a cross-domain URL is specified, an error will be reported. The purpose of this design is to prevent malicious code from making users think they are on another website
// 报错 history.pushState(null, null, 'https://twitter.com/hello');
[replaceState()]
The parameters of the history.replaceState method are the same as The pushState method is exactly the same, except that the replaceState() method will modify the current history entry instead of creating a new entry
Assume that the current web page is example.com/example.html
history.pushState({page: 1}, 'title 1', '?page=1'); history.pushState({page: 2}, 'title 2', '?page=2'); history.replaceState({page: 3}, 'title 3', '?page=3'); history.back() // url显示为http://example.com/example.html?page=1 history.back() // url显示为http://example.com/example.html history.go(2) // url显示为http://example.com/example.html?page=3
[state]
The history.state property returns the state object of the current page
history.pushState({page: 1}, 'title 1', '?page=1'); history.state// { page: 1 }
[popstate event]
Whenever the same When the document's browsing history (that is, the history object) changes, the popstate event will be triggered.
It should be noted that just calling the pushState method or replaceState method will not trigger this event. Only the user clicks the browser to go back. button and forward button, or when using javascript to call the back(), forward(), go() methods. In addition, this event only targets the same document. If the browsing history is switched and different documents are loaded, the event will not be triggered.
When used, you can specify a callback function for the popstate event. The parameter of this callback function is an event event object, and its state attribute points to the state object provided by the pushState and replaceState methods for the current URL (that is, the first parameter of these two methods)
window.onpopstate = function (event) { console.log('location: ' + document.location); console.log('state: ' + JSON.stringify(event.state)); };
上面代码中的event.state,就是通过pushState和replaceState方法,为当前URL绑定的state对象
这个state对象也可以直接通过history对象读取
var currentState = history.state;
往返缓存
默认情况下,浏览器会在当前会话(session)缓存页面,当用户点击“前进”或“后退”按钮时,浏览器就会从缓存中加载页面
浏览器有一个特性叫“往返缓存”(back-forward cache或bfcache),可以在用户使用浏览器的“后退”和“前进”按钮时加快页面的转换速度。这个缓存中不仅保存着页面数据,还保存了DOM和javascript的状态;实际上是将整个页面都保存在了内存里。如果页面位于bfcache中,那么再次打开该页面时就不会触发load事件
[注意]IE10-浏览器不支持
【pageshow】
pageshow事件在页面加载时触发,包括第一次加载和从缓存加载两种情况。如果要指定页面每次加载(不管是不是从浏览器缓存)时都运行的代码,可以放在这个事件的监听函数
第一次加载时,它的触发顺序排在load事件后面。从缓存加载时,load事件不会触发,因为网页在缓存中的样子通常是load事件的监听函数运行后的样子,所以不必重复执行。同理,如果是从缓存中加载页面,网页内初始化的JavaScript脚本(比如DOMContentLoaded事件的监听函数)也不会执行
[注意]虽然这个事件的目标是document,但必须将其事件处理程序添加到window
pageshow事件有一个persisted属性,返回一个布尔值。页面第一次加载时或没有从缓存加载时,这个属性是false;当页面从缓存加载时,这个属性是true
(function(){ var showCount = 0; window.onload = function(){ console.log('loaded'); } window.onpageshow = function(e){ e = e || event; showCount ++; console.log(e.persisted,showCount + 'times'); } })();
[注意]上面的例子使用了私有作用域,以防止变量showCount进入全局作用域。如果单击了浏览器的“刷新”按钮,那么showCount的值就会被重置为0,因为页面已经完全重新加载了
【pagehide】
与pageshow事件对应的是pagehide事件,该事件会在浏览器卸载页面的时候触发,而且是在unload事件之前触发。与pageshow事件一样,pagehide在document上面触发,但其事件处理程序必须要添加到window对象
[注意]指定了onunload事件处理程序的页面会被自动排除在bfcache之外,即使事件处理程序是空的。原因在于,onunload最常用于撤销在onload中所执行的操作,而跳过onload后再次显示页面很可能就会导致页面不正常
pagehide事件的event对象也包含persisted属性,不过其用途稍有不同。如果页面是从bfcache中加载的,那么persisted的值就是true;如果页面在卸载之后会被保存在bfcache中,那么persisted的值也会被设置为true。因此,当第一次触发pageshow时,persisted的值一定是false,而在第一次触发pagehide时,persisted就会变成true(除非页面不会被保存在bfcache中)
window.onpagehide = function(e){ e = e || event; console.log(e.persisted); }
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