Change the URL in the browser without loading the new page using JavaScript

JavascriptUrlHtml5 HistoryFragment IdentifierHashchange

Javascript Problem Overview


How would I have a JavaScript action that may have some effects on the current page but would also change the URL in the browser so if the user hits reload or bookmark, then the new URL is used?

It would also be nice if the back button would reload the original URL.

I am trying to record JavaScript state in the URL.

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

If you want it to work in browsers that don't support history.pushState and history.popState yet, the "old" way is to set the fragment identifier, which won't cause a page reload.

The basic idea is to set the window.location.hash property to a value that contains whatever state information you need, then either use the window.onhashchange event, or for older browsers that don't support onhashchange (IE < 8, Firefox < 3.6), periodically check to see if the hash has changed (using setInterval for example) and update the page. You will also need to check the hash value on page load to set up the initial content.

If you're using jQuery there's a hashchange plugin that will use whichever method the browser supports. I'm sure there are plugins for other libraries as well.

One thing to be careful of is colliding with ids on the page, because the browser will scroll to any element with a matching id.

Solution 2 - Javascript

With HTML 5, use the history.pushState function. As an example:

<script type="text/javascript">
var stateObj = { foo: "bar" };
function change_my_url()
{
   history.pushState(stateObj, "page 2", "bar.html");
}
var link = document.getElementById('click');
link.addEventListener('click', change_my_url, false);
</script>

and a href:

<a href="#" id='click'>Click to change url to bar.html</a>

If you want to change the URL without adding an entry to the back button list, use history.replaceState instead.

Solution 3 - Javascript

window.location.href contains the current URL. You can read from it, you can append to it, and you can replace it, which may cause a page reload.

If, as it sounds like, you want to record javascript state in the URL so it can be bookmarked, without reloading the page, append it to the current URL after a # and have a piece of javascript triggered by the onload event parse the current URL to see if it contains saved state.

If you use a ? instead of a #, you will force a reload of the page, but since you will parse the saved state on load this may not actually be a problem; and this will make the forward and back buttons work correctly as well.

Solution 4 - Javascript

I would strongly suspect this is not possible, because it would be an incredible security problem if it were. For example, I could make a page which looked like a bank login page, and make the URL in the address bar look just like the real bank!

Perhaps if you explain why you want to do this, folks might be able to suggest alternative approaches...

[Edit in 2011: Since I wrote this answer in 2008, more info has come to light regarding an HTML5 technique that allows the URL to be modified as long as it is from the same origin]

Solution 5 - Javascript

jQuery has a great plugin for changing browsers' URL, called jQuery-pusher.

JavaScript pushState and jQuery could be used together, like:

history.pushState(null, null, $(this).attr('href'));

Example:

$('a').click(function (event) {

  // Prevent default click action
  event.preventDefault();     

  // Detect if pushState is available
  if(history.pushState) {
    history.pushState(null, null, $(this).attr('href'));
  }
  return false;
});


Using only JavaScript history.pushState(), which changes the referrer, that gets used in the HTTP header for XMLHttpRequest objects created after you change the state.

Example:

window.history.pushState("object", "Your New Title", "/new-url");

The pushState() method:

pushState() takes three parameters: a state object, a title (which is currently ignored), and (optionally) a URL. Let's examine each of these three parameters in more detail:

  1. state object — The state object is a JavaScript object which is associated with the new history entry created by pushState(). Whenever the user navigates to the new state, a popstate event is fired, and the state property of the event contains a copy of the history entry's state object.

    The state object can be anything that can be serialized. Because Firefox saves state objects to the user's disk so they can be restored after the user restarts her browser, we impose a size limit of 640k characters on the serialized representation of a state object. If you pass a state object whose serialized representation is larger than this to pushState(), the method will throw an exception. If you need more space than this, you're encouraged to use sessionStorage and/or localStorage.

  2. title — Firefox currently ignores this parameter, although it may use it in the future. Passing the empty string here should be safe against future changes to the method. Alternatively, you could pass a short title for the state to which you're moving.

  3. URL — The new history entry's URL is given by this parameter. Note that the browser won't attempt to load this URL after a call to pushState(), but it might attempt to load the URL later, for instance after the user restarts her browser. The new URL does not need to be absolute; if it's relative, it's resolved relative to the current URL. The new URL must be of the same origin as the current URL; otherwise, pushState() will throw an exception. This parameter is optional; if it isn't specified, it's set to the document's current URL.

Solution 6 - Javascript

Browser security settings prevent people from modifying the displayed url directly. You could imagine the phishing vulnerabilities that would cause.

Only reliable way to change the url without changing pages is to use an internal link or hash. e.g.: http://site.com/page.html becomes http://site.com/page.html#item1 . This technique is often used in hijax(AJAX + preserve history).

When doing this I'll often just use links for the actions with the hash as the href, then add click events with jquery that use the requested hash to determine and delegate the action.

I hope that sets you on the right path.

Solution 7 - Javascript

There is a Yahoo YUI component (Browser History Manager) which can handle this: http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/history/

Solution 8 - Javascript

Facebook's photo gallery does this using a #hash in the URL. Here are some example URLs:

Before clicking 'next':

/photo.php?fbid=496429237507&set=a.218088072507.133423.681812507&pid=5887027&id=681812507

After clicking 'next':

/photo.php?fbid=496429237507&set=a.218088072507.133423.681812507&pid=5887027&id=681812507#!/photo.php?fbid=496435457507&set=a.218088072507.133423.681812507&pid=5887085&id=681812507

Note the hash-bang (#!) immediately followed by the new URL.

Solution 9 - Javascript

A more simple answer i present,

window.history.pushState(null, null, "/abc")

this will add /abc after the domain name in the browser URL. Just copy this code and paste it in the browser console and see the URL changing to "https://stackoverflow.com/abc"

Solution 10 - Javascript

There's a jquery plugin http://www.asual.com/jquery/address/

I think this is what you need.

Solution 11 - Javascript

What is working for me is - history.replaceState() function which is as follows -

history.replaceState(data,"Title of page"[,'url-of-the-page']);

This will not reload page, you can make use of it with event of javascript

Solution 12 - Javascript

I was wondering if it will posible as long as the parent path in the page is same, only something new is appended to it.

So like let's say the user is at the page: http://domain.com/site/page.html Then the browser can let me do location.append = new.html and the page becomes: http://domain.com/site/page.htmlnew.html and the browser does not change it.

Or just allow the person to change get parameter, so let's location.get = me=1&page=1.

So original page becomes http://domain.com/site/page.html?me=1&page=1 and it does not refresh.

The problem with # is that the data is not cached (at least I don't think so) when hash is changed. So it is like each time a new page is being loaded, whereas back- and forward buttons in a non-Ajax page are able to cache data and do not spend time on re-loading the data.

From what I saw, the Yahoo history thing already loads all of the data at once. It does not seem to be doing any Ajax requests. So when a div is used to handle different method overtime, that data is not stored for each history state.

Solution 13 - Javascript

my code is:

//change address bar
function setLocation(curLoc){
    try {
        history.pushState(null, null, curLoc);
        return false;
    } catch(e) {}
        location.hash = '#' + curLoc;
}

and action:

setLocation('http://example.com/your-url-here');

and example

$(document).ready(function(){
    $('nav li a').on('click', function(){
        if($(this).hasClass('active')) {
            
        } else {
            setLocation($(this).attr('href'));
        }
            return false;
    });
});

That's all :)

Solution 14 - Javascript

I've had success with:

location.hash="myValue";

It just adds #myValue to the current URL. If you need to trigger an event on page Load, you can use the same location.hash to check for the relevant value. Just remember to remove the # from the value returned by location.hash e.g.

var articleId = window.location.hash.replace("#","");

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QuestionSteven NobleView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptMatthew CrumleyView Answer on Stackoverflow
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