There was a post this morning asking about: How many people disable javascript. Then I began to wonder what techniques might be used to determine if the user has it disabled. Anyone know of some short/simple ways to detect if Javascript is disabled? my intention is to give warning that the site is not able to function properly without the browser having JS enabled, eventually I would want to redirect them to content that is able to work in the abscence of JS, but I need this detection as a place holder to start.
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I assume that you're trying to decide whether or not to deliver JavaScript enhanced content. Obviously the best thing to do is to degrade cleanly, so that your site still operates without JS, and I guess that you mean detection on the server-side, rather than just the use of <noscript> tags. There isn't really a good way to do server-side JavaScript detection. The best option open to you is to use JavaScript to drop a cookie, and then test for that cookie in your server side scripting for future page views, and deliver content appropriately. |
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Users without js will get the If you want a purely statistical idea of how many of your users have javascript disabled, you could do something like:
then check your access logs to see how many times this image has been hit. A slightly crude solution, but it'll give you a good idea percentage-wise for your user base. The above approach (image tracking) won't work well for text-only browsers or those that don't support js at all, so if your userbase swings primarily towards that area, this mightn't be the best approach. |
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I'd suggest you go the other way around by writing unobtrusive JavaScript: Make the features of your project work for users with JavaScript disabled, and when your're done: implement your JavaScript UI-enhancements. |
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You can use a simple JS snippet to set the value of a hidden field. When posted back you know if JS was enabled or not. Or you can try to open a popup window that you close rapidly (but that might be visible). Also you have the NOSCRIPT tag that you can use to show text for browsers with JS disabled. |
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If your use case is that you have a form (e.g., a login form) and your server-side script needs to know if the user has JavaScript enabled, you can do something like this:
This will change the value of js_enabled to 1 before submitting the form. If your server-side script gets a 0, no JS. If it gets a 1, JS! |
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You'll want to take a look at the noscript tag.
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The noscript tag works well, but will require each additional page request to continue serving useless JS files, since essentially noscript is a client side check. You could set a cookie with JS, but as someone else pointed out, this could fail. Ideally, you'd like to be able to detect JS client side, and without using cookies, set a session server side for that user that indicates is JS is enabled. A possibility is to dynamically add a 1x1 image using JavaScript where the src attribute is actually a server side script. All this script does is saves to the current user session that JS is enabled ($_SESSION['js_enabled']). You can then output a 1x1 blank image back to the browser. The script won't run for users who have JS disabled, and hence the $_SESSION['js_enabled'] won't be set. Then for further pages served to this user, you can decide whether to include all of your external JS files, but you'll always want to include the check, since some of your users might be using the NoScript Firefox add-on or have JS disabled temporarily for some other reason. You'll probably want to include this check somewhere close to the end of your page so that the additional HTTP request doesn't slow down the rendering of your page. |
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If javascript is disabled your client-side code won't run anyway, so I assume you mean you want that info available server-side. In that case, noscript is less helpful. Instead, I'd have a hidden input and use javascript to fill in a value. After your next request or postback, if the value is there you know javascript is turned on. Be careful of things like noscript, where the first request may show javascript disabled, but future requests turn it on. |
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A technique I've used in the past is to use JavaScript to write a session cookie that simply acts as a flag to say that JavaScript is enabled. Then the server-side code looks for this cookie and if it's not found takes action as appropriate. Of course this technique does rely on cookies being enabled! |
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I think you could insert an image tag into a noscript tag and look at the stats how many times your site and how often this image has been loaded. |
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You might, for instance, use something like document.location = 'java_page.html' to redirect the browser to a new, script-laden page. Failure to redirect implies that JavaScript is unavailable, in which case you can either resort to CGI ro utines or insert appropriate code between the tags. (NOTE: NOSCRIPT is only available in Netscape Navigator 3.0 and up.) |
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People have already posted examples that are good options for detection, but based on your requirement of "give warning that the site is not able to function properly without the browser having JS enabled". You basically add an element that appears somehow on the page, for example the 'pop-ups' on Stack Overflow when you earn a badge, with an appropriate message, then remove this with some Javascript that runs as soon as the page is loaded (and I mean the DOM, not the whole page). |
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Detect it in what? JavaScript? That would be impossible. If you just want it for logging purposes, you could use some sort of tracking scheme, where each page has JavaScript that will make a request for a special resource (probably a very small |
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This is what worked for me: it redirects a visitor if javascript is disabled
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Adding a refresh in meta inside noscript is not a good idea.
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Why don't you just put a hijacked onClick() event handler that will fire only when JS is enabled, and use this to append a parameter (js=true) to the clicked/selected URL (you could also detect a drop down list and change the value- of add a hidden form field). So now when the server sees this parameter (js=true) it knows that JS is enabled and then do your fancy logic server-side. |
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thanks a lot Ernie13 :D |
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simply use the noscript tag and ask the user to enable javascript |
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