Detecting when Iframe content has loaded (Cross browser)

JavascriptEventsCross Browser

Javascript Problem Overview


I'm trying to detect when an iframe and its content have loaded but not having much luck. My application takes some input in text fields in the parent window and updates the iframe to provide a 'live preview'

I started with the following code (YUI) to detect when the iframe load event occurs.

$E.on('preview-pane', 'load', function(){
    previewBody = $('preview-pane').contentWindow.document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0];
}

'preview-pane' is the ID of my iframe and I'm using YUI to attach the event handler. However, trying to access the body in my callback (upon iframe load) fails, I think because the iframe loads before the event handler is ready. This code works if I delay the iframe loading by making the php script that generates it sleep.

Basically, I'm asking what is the correct approach across browsers to detect when the iframe has loaded and its document is ready?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

> to detect when the iframe has loaded and its document is ready?

It's ideal if you can get the iframe to tell you itself from a script inside the frame. For example it could call a parent function directly to tell it it's ready. Care is always required with cross-frame code execution as things can happen in an order you don't expect. Another alternative is to set ‘var isready= true;’ in its own scope, and have the parent script sniff for ‘contentWindow.isready’ (and add the onload handler if not).

If for some reason it's not practical to have the iframe document co-operate, you've got the traditional load-race problem, namely that even if the elements are right next to each other:

<img id="x" ... />
<script type="text/javascript">
    document.getElementById('x').onload= function() {
        ...
    };
</script>

there is no guarantee that the item won't already have loaded by the time the script executes.

The ways out of load-races are:

  1. on IE, you can use the ‘readyState’ property to see if something's already loaded;

  2. if having the item available only with JavaScript enabled is acceptable, you can create it dynamically, setting the ‘onload’ event function before setting source and appending to the page. In this case it cannot be loaded before the callback is set;

  3. the old-school way of including it in the markup:

    <img onload="callback(this)" ... />

Inline ‘onsomething’ handlers in HTML are almost always the wrong thing and to be avoided, but in this case sometimes it's the least bad option.

Solution 2 - Javascript

See this blog post. It uses jQuery, but it should help you even if you are not using it.

Basically you add this to your document.ready()

$('iframe').load(function() {
    RunAfterIFrameLoaded();
});

Solution 3 - Javascript

For those using React, detecting a same-origin iframe load event is as simple as setting onLoad event listener on iframe element.

Solution 4 - Javascript

For anyone using Ember, this should work as expected:

<iframe onLoad={{action 'actionName'}}  frameborder='0' src={{iframeSrc}} />

Solution 5 - Javascript

  1. This code detects when iframe content has loaded Without jquery:

Credit Biranchi's answer

    // wait for the doc to load (wait for the class 'iframe...' to load) before sending the script
    checkIframeLoaded()
    
    function checkIframeLoaded() {
        // console.log(" function checked")
        // Get a handle to the iframe element
        var iframe = document.getElementsByClassName("docs-texteventtarget-iframe")[0];
        console.log("iframe", iframe)
        // check if the iframe is loaded or not (= undefined = null)
        if (iframe == null) {
            // If we are here, it is not loaded. Set things up so we check the status again in 1000 milliseconds
            window.setTimeout(checkIframeLoaded, 1000);
        } else {
            var iframeDoc = iframe.contentDocument || iframe.contentWindow.document;
            // Check if loading is completed
            if (iframeDoc.readyState == 'complete') {
    
                // The loading is complete, call the function we want executed once the iframe is loaded
                iframeDoc.addEventListener("keydown", dispatchkeyboard, false);
            } else {
                // even if the iframe is loaded the "readystate may not be completed yet" so we need to recall the function.
                window.setTimeout(checkIframeLoaded, 1000);
            }
        }
    }
    
  
  1. This code works with jquery:

Credit: gilles bousquet's answer

    // use jquery to detect when iframe is loaded but doesn't work offline
    // (this code needs jQuery because it use the "$" below). if you use it; add this require in the ===usercript=== section
    //  @require    http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js

    var editingIFrame = $('iframe.docs-texteventtarget-iframe')[0];
   if (editingIFrame) {
        console.log("inside doc.getele")
        editingIFrame.contentDocument.addEventListener("keydown", dispatchkeyboard, false);
    }
    

Solution 6 - Javascript

jQuery(document).ready(function () {
	jQuery('iframe').load(function() {
		console.log(jQuery(this))
	});
})

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionDavid Snabel-CauntView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptbobinceView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptkgiannakakisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptFarzad YousefzadehView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptMax WallaceView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptJinSnowView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptMahdi BashirpourView Answer on Stackoverflow