I came up with a less conventional approach that certainly has some drawbacks.
First, the drawbacks: on any page you apply this solution, it will prevent you from effectively using hashes in your urls to scroll down to elements, and scrollIntoView
is also blocked/affected. If you know your page won't need to do those things, this may be a good option for you.
The approach is to use a CSS scroll-padding-top
property on your parent document with a large enough value that the "padding" pushes your scroll position back to the very top of the page, preventing the hash from scrolling anywhere. Depending on how your page is set up, the style can be applied to the document's html tag like so:
<style>
html {
scroll-padding-top: 99999px;
}
</style>
You could also set it to a smaller value, like 200px
, if you know that the iframe will be rendered within that distance from the top of the page.
One advantage of this approach over the excellent accepted answer is that in this approach the iframe contents will be scrolled to whatever the hash pointed at, which may have been the purpose of using a hash in the iframe URL in the first place. The accepted answer's trick with hiding the iframe to prevent scrolling on the parent window has the side effect of skipping over the scrolling that would have happened inside the iframe.