Summary
onpopstate
is an event handler for the popstate
event on the window.
A popstate
event is dispatched to the window each time the active history entry changes between two history entries for the same document. If the activated history entry was created by a call to history.pushState()
, or was affected by a call to history.replaceState()
, the popstate
event's state
property contains a copy of the history entry's state object.
Note: calling history.pushState()
or history.replaceState()
won't trigger a popstate
event. The popstate
event is only triggered by performing a browser action, such as clicking on the back button (or calling history.back()
in JavaScript), when navigating between two history entries for the same document.
Browsers tend to handle the popstate
event differently on page load. Chrome (prior to v34) and Safari (prior to 10.0) always emit a popstate
event on page load, but Firefox doesn't.
Syntax
window.onpopstate = funcRef;
- funcRef is a handler function.
The popstate event
For example, a page at http://example.com/example.html
running the following code will generate alerts as indicated:
window.onpopstate = function(event) { alert("location: " + document.location + ", state: " + JSON.stringify(event.state)); }; history.pushState({page: 1}, "title 1", "?page=1"); history.pushState({page: 2}, "title 2", "?page=2"); history.replaceState({page: 3}, "title 3", "?page=3"); history.back(); // alerts "location: http://example.com/example.html?page=1, state: {"page":1}" history.back(); // alerts "location: http://example.com/example.html, state: null history.go(2); // alerts "location: http://example.com/example.html?page=3, state: {"page":3}
Note that even though the original history entry (for http://example.com/example.html
) has no state object associated with it, a popstate
event is still fired, when we activate that entry after the second call to history.back()
.