Why is document.body == null in Firefox but not Safari
I have a problem with a page where I am trying to get colorbox (a kind of lightbox for jQuery) working. It doesn't work apparently due to the document.body
being null
in FireFox (3.5.3). This is not the case in Safari (4.0.3) where the colorbox works.
Something that jumps out at me is that (I'm using Drupal 6) drupal has appended a script tag to set some JavaScript variables at the very bottom of the page, below the closing body and html tags. Otherwise I don't see a problem. Unfortunately I'm having a lot of trouble getting it not to do that. Could it b开发者_C百科e this that's causing FF to have issues with the body?
Using colorbox's example files in Firefox does work (and the document.body
is defined there).
Is there any way I could use jQuery to refill the document.body
property with something from $()
perhaps, or should I keep banging at drupal to not put a script tag outside the html tags (easier said than done)?
To clarify the document.body
is null
even after the page is done loading. Here's a Firebug console capture:
>>> document.body
null
>>> $().attr('body')
null
The usual reason document.body
is null is because you're executing script before the <body>
tag(*) has been encountered. Without seeing code I can't say for sure, but that'd be the usual reason. Move where you've put the scripts.
(*: or another element such as <p>
that the browser knows can't occur outside of a body, in which case it silently adds a <body>
to fix up your missing markup. A difference in parsing of certain usually-in-body-tags might explain why Safari allows you to get away with it.)
Could it be this that's causing FF to have issues with the body?
No. It's broken markup and Drupal shouldn't do it, but closing the </body>
doesn't stop document.body
referencing the proper DOM Node.
Is there any way I could use jQuery to refill the document.body
No, document.body
is only reflecting basically the same as document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0]
, so trying to set it is not sensible, and if you can't find a body with document.body
, jQuery won't be able to find it with $('body')
either.
There should not be any output from Drupal below the body tag. Check your themes page.tpl.php
file. The end should look pretty much like this:
<!-- BEGIN closure: must always be last element in body -->
<?php print $closure; ?>
<!-- END closure -->
</body>
</html>
There should be no print statement below the output of the $closure variable, as this needs to be the last content output (but still within the body).
Don't you use another JS framework along with jQuery ? If so, did you take care of how to load both libraries so that they remain compatible (order, compatibility fix...) ?
Well this is odd, but just adding this line at the bottom of my $(document).ready(function(){});
fixed whatever was breaking the body:
if(null==document.body){document.body = $('body')[0];}
But I'll have to look more at why it got broken in the first place, and also why it didn't break in safari.
sorry this answer isn't in jquery (I've been wrestling with something similar over the last couple of hours with prototype).
Basically, the top answer from bobince is quite quite helpful, however you can re-assign the document body the trick is finding it.
This is prototype but you get the idea,
body = $("content").ancestors().last().children[1];
Where content is some defined element on the page you can find with usual selectors, any can be used it doesn't really matter, from there you traverse to the top and then down and along to the body element.
Hope that helps, like I said my problem was only similar, not sure how this will go for you, but I hope it at least triggers an idea for someone.
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