When the source of an iframe is:
javascript:'';
as in:
<iframe id="SpControlFrame1" name="SpControlFrame1" src="javascript:'';" path_src="index.php?cmd=YYY" ></iframe>
What is going on? What does the src="javascript:'';" tell the browser to do?
what does the "path_src" do?
Thanks Chris
To the best of my knowledge the
src
attribute maps to theiframe
elementslocation.href
. So settingsrc
tojavascript:'';
is a bit nonsensical and the browser will do one of two things:Either way you accomplish very little. Is this code you inherited or are you trying to do something tricky with the
iframe
?It tells the browser to display the result of executing the empty string literal. Therefore, it would just display an empty string.
You can test the effect of this by typing in
javascript:'http://stackoverflow.com';
in the address bar of a normal window/tab. You'll get a white page that says "http://stackoverflow.com" and you won't actually be taken to that URL.This is the reason that bookmarklets often wrap the code inside
void()
or an anonymous function that doesn't return anything to stop the browser from trying to display the result of executing the bookmarklet. For example:Or:
If you directly use code that returns something (a new window instance in this case), the browser will end up displaying that:
In Firefox the above will display: