25

Somehow somewhere in my code one of the elements on the page gets a style attribute which I don't expect it to get. Namely, it gets style="position:fixed". I can see this happening in HTML tab in Firebug, but can't find it in the code. The application is fairly big and I can't simply look through all of the code to find the place, besides, several third-party libraries are being used (jQuery is one of them).

So, my question is, is it possible to somehow catch this style being changed and get the trace?

1
  • In my case, it was Ad Blocker doing it (somebody might find this helpful).
    – Marko
    Apr 15, 2019 at 14:47

4 Answers 4

23

In Google Chrome, right click on an element in the page and select "Inspect Element." The Developer Tools window or pane will open with that element selected in the source view. You can then right click the selected tag and choose "Break on Attributes Modifications."

1
  • 2
    Doesn't work on page reload or when changing views in Angular. Sep 16, 2016 at 9:06
12

Well, after a couple of hours of googling and experimenting, it seems that the best one can do it setup a MutationEvent handler (Firefox supports them) like this:

var node_modified = function(evt) {
    if(evt.attrName == 'style') {
        alert('Style is changing from ' + evt.prevValue + ' to ' + evt.newValue);
    }
}
var test_close = document.getElementById('test_close');
test_close.addEventListener('DOMAttrModified', node_modified, false);

An then set up some kind of logging throughout your code and see when this event gets triggered. Unfortunately, you can't just set up a breakpoint in the mutation event handler and see the stack trace, because event handler's stack trace has no information about the place in the code, where the event got triggered. Kind of logical, but I think that with some hacking this feature can be implemented in Firebug.

Thank you for your time!

1
2

In Firebug's HTML inspector you can right click on a node and there is an option to interrupt on attribute change.

Breakpoints persist through page reloads and you can also browse the call stack.

0

Sounds like you really need a debugger. Firebug has one built in, otherwise you can give Venkman a try, which I find a bit more cumbersome but perhaps is more effective..

Good luck! :)

1
  • 1
    Well, I use Firebug, but I can't find a way to set break-point at the place where attribute gets changed, because I don't know where it is and finding it is exactly what I want here... Aug 10, 2009 at 10:46

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.