问题
Since window.history.pushState is not aviliable for HTML 4 browsers like IE9 , I have looked for history.js, a jQuery library that simulates the pushState behavior.
The problem is , when using pushState, the end of the url is duplicated
For example,
History.pushState(null,null,window.location.pathname + '?page=1');
returns,
http://www.development.com/test.html#test.html?page=1
How do I avoid this problem? Thank you kindly.
Update (On 2012 / 1 /22) , Question for bounty:
if (pageNo == 1){
//window.history.pushState({"html":currURL,"pageTitle":''},"", window.location.pathname + '?page=1'); For chrome and FX only
//History.replaceState(null,null,'')
//History.pushState(null,null,'?issue=' + currPageIssueNo + '&page=1');
}
else if (pageNo != 1 || pageNo == 1 && linkPageNo > 1 ) {
History.pushState(null,null,'?issue=' + currPageIssueNo + '&page=' + pageNo);
//window.history.pushState({"html":currURL,"pageTitle":''},"", newURL); For chrome and FX only
}
I am still encounter the problem , if it is the first page
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html?issue=20121220&page=1
When i go to second page in IE9 , it has url :
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html?issue=20121220&page=1#flipV5.html?issue=20121220&page=2
Which i would like to achieve is
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html?issue=20121220&page=2
If it is impossible for HTML 4 browser, please at least achieve
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html/#?issue=20121220&page=2
thanks for kindly help
回答1:
Your code does exactly what you'd expect it to.
window.location.pathname + '?page=1'
Prints out the location pathname (test.html
), and appends ?page=1
Remove window.location.pathname
and it should work.
回答2:
You need to set up a client-side redirect for IE. Assuming the user lands at this page:
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html?issue=20121220&page=1
They need to be sent to
http://localhost/development/flipV5.html#?issue=20121220&page=1
The reason is that IE <= 9 doesn't let you modify anything before the hash, without sending the user to a new page. It's an old security feature preventing changing the URL to facebook.com
, when you're really on spambook.com
. Recently, people have realized that that's overkill.
The redirect looks like this:
<!--[if LTE IE 9]>
<script type="text/javascript">
if (location.search)
location.href = location.pathname + "#" + location.search;
</script>
<![endif]-->
You can now push states, and they won't show up in both the search and the hash (that's after the ?
and #
respectively)
回答3:
Just remove window.location.pathname from History.pushState
History.pushState(null,null,'?page=1');
回答4:
Maybe try:
History.replaceState(null,null,'?issue=' + currPageIssueNo + '&page=' + pageNo);
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14342912/using-history-pushstate-in-ie9