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Parent/Child Windows References
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Join Date: Mar 2008
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Hi,
I have the same problem, and I can't achieve to serialize my popup reference.
I tried with JSON and a lot of different libraries :
var popupVar = window.open('url', 'name');
var serializedString = JSON.encode(popupVar);
var serializedString = popupVar.toJSONString();
...
Every time I have errors. I could catch it with IE, and it says : [Object error]. Great :p
In Firefox it just crashs it...
I did'nt find any real example on serializing JS "native" objects, only JS "created" objects (like var Person = { this.id; this.name; })
Does someone achieve it ? Know how to serialize this popupVar ?
Thanks a lot
I have the exact same java script issue where even if my parent window reloads, it should still be able to hold the child window references. Did you manage to get a solution for that. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks in Advance.
> even if my parent window reloads, it should still be able to hold the child window
> references.
AFAIK, you simply can't. To put it in simple terms, the Javascript variables disappear after a page reload. After all Javascript is a client side technology.
A work around would be to store all the information you need to maintain inside a cookie i.e. whether the child window was open or not and if yes then what were it's contents; at the same time being aware of the 4KB limit imposed on the cookie size.
> references.
AFAIK, you simply can't. To put it in simple terms, the Javascript variables disappear after a page reload. After all Javascript is a client side technology.
A work around would be to store all the information you need to maintain inside a cookie i.e. whether the child window was open or not and if yes then what were it's contents; at the same time being aware of the 4KB limit imposed on the cookie size.
I don't accept change; I don't deserve to live.
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> even if my parent window reloads, it should still be able to hold the child window
> references.
AFAIK, you simply can't. To put it in simple terms, the Javascript variables disappear after a page reload. After all Javascript is a client side technology.
A work around would be to store all the information you need to maintain inside a cookie i.e. whether the child window was open or not and if yes then what were it's contents; at the same time being aware of the 4KB limit imposed on the cookie size.
However, if you could persist the current window to the next reload in the browser, you could also persist reference to open windows, and other objects (dependents).
Unfortunately I cannot release the code for this right now, as I would like to, as we have a patent pending. I will try and get this code out in ASAP as I know this is needed in many areas of web development, especially the web2.0.
As soon as we get the patent sorted you will be able to persist references to host objects in javascript between the loading of new windows.
At the moment I am interested in any other methods that may have been discovered to do this, though I have not found any so far.
-- update:
I'll add some code to demonstrate persistence of javascript native and host objects after I get it tested in a majority of browsers and OS's.
Last edited by digital-ether; Mar 22nd, 2008 at 12:19 pm.
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You can't store a popup window reference in a cookie as it is directly dependent on the current parent window/document which is a javascript host object.
However, if you could persist the current window to the next reload in the browser, you could also persist reference to open windows, and other objects (dependents).
You could store information like the child windows' attributes like its height, width, position etc. in a cookie. On a document load, your javascript function would then check the contents of the cookies and then re-create a child window based on the flag 'recreateNeeded' which would be either true or false or 0 or 1 (the way you want it to be). Of course this means persisting the child window information at regular intervals and writing a custom mini parser which would parse the contents of the cookie at load time but yes, it's very much possible with a bit of effort .
I don't accept change; I don't deserve to live.
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