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javascript - HTML5 History API Demo

I've been reading about the HTML5 history API and so far, I haven't found a simple working demo that shows the mechanics with code.

Here is a working jsfiddle: 4 buttons and 4 divs. When the user presses a button, it shows the corresponding panel.

What I'm looking to do is:

1) rewrite the URL so that when the user is on panel 4 the url ends with /Panel4
2) make the back button and forward button work with the history API.

I know there's the history.js plug-in but I want to understand how the API works in its simplest form.

Hopefully, the jsfiddle will help others who'll come to this page looking for a code demo.

Thanks.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Ok, I made this example for you. Start with HTML code (index.html):

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Stackoverflow</title>
        <script type="text/javascript" src="sof.js"> </script>
    </head>
    <body onLoad="load();">
        <ul id="menu">
            <li><a href="/home">home</a></li>
            <li><a href="/about">about</a></li>
            <li><a href="/blog">blog</a></li>
            <li><a href="/photos">photos</a></li>
        </ul>
        <button onclick="back ();">Back</button>
        <button onclick="ff ();">Forward</button>
        <div>
            Action: <span id="action"></span><br/>
            Url: <span id="url"></span><br/>
            Description: <span id="description"></span>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>

And then the javascript file (sof.js):

var menu, url, description, action, data, historyState, act;

function $ (id) {return document.getElementById (id);}

// Updates infos
function update (state) {
    action.innerHTML = act;
    url.innerHTML = state.url;
    description.innerHTML = state.description;
}

// Goes back
function back () {
    act = 'Back';
    history.back ();
}

// Goes forward
function ff () {
    act = 'Forward';
    history.forward ();
}

function load () {
    menu = $ ('menu');
    url = $ ('url');
    description = $ ('description');
    action = $ ('action');

    // State to save
    historyState = {
        home: {
            description: 'Homepage'
        } ,
        about: {
            description: 'Infos about this website'
        } ,
        blog: {
            description: 'My personal blog'
        } ,
        photos: {
            description: 'View my photos'
        }
    };

    // This is fired when history.back or history.forward is called
    window.addEventListener ('popstate', function (event) {
        var hs = history.state;

        if ((hs === null) || (hs === undefined)) hs = event.state;
        if ((hs === null) || (hs === undefined)) hs = window.event.state;

        if (hs !== null) update (hs);
    });

    menu.addEventListener ('click', function (event) {
        var el = event.target;
        // Prevents url reload
        event.preventDefault ();

        // Handles anchors only
        if (el.nodeName === 'A') {
            // Gets url of the page
            historyState[el.innerHTML].url = el.getAttribute ('href');
            // Creates a new history instance and it saves state on it
            history.pushState (historyState[el.innerHTML], null, el.href);
            act = 'Normal navigation';
            update (historyState[el.innerHTML]);
        }
    });

    // Handles first visit navigation
    var index = location.pathname.split ('/');
    index = index[index.length-1];
    if (index !== '') {
        historyState[index].url = location.pathname;
        history.pushState (historyState[index], null, location.pathname);
        act = 'First visit';
        update (historyState[index]);
    }
}

And a .htaccess for direct request:

RewriteEngine On

RewriteRule ^home$ ./index.html
RewriteRule ^about$ ./index.html
RewriteRule ^blog$ ./index.html
RewriteRule ^photos$ ./index.htm

Each time that an anchor is clicked, a new history instance is pushed onto history stack and an object (called state) is saved with it: the local url is changed but the loading is stopped by 'event.preventDefault()' method. Further more, some information (as URL, Description and Action) are updated.

Then, with 'back' and 'forward' buttons, you can travel through the history and use 'history.state' (or event.state or window.event.state, it depends on browsers) to retrieve the current state.

And, in the end, if you type the entire url directly into the address bar, it works as the same with the above .htaccess ;)

I hope this example helps you ;)

Ciao

Wilk

PS: For further details:

  1. Manipulating the browser history
  2. History object
  3. History howto

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