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We've got a few pages using ajax to load in content and there's a few occasions where we need to deep link into a page. Instead of having a link to "Users" and telling people to click "settings" it's helpful to be able to link people to user.aspx#settings

To allow people to provide us with correct links to sections (for tech support, etc.) I've got it set up to automatically modify the hash in the URL whenever a button is clicked. The only issue of course is that when this happens, it also scrolls the page to this element.

Is there a way to disable this? Below is how I'm doing this so far.

$(function(){
    //This emulates a click on the correct button on page load
    if(document.location.hash){
     $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
     s=$(document.location.hash).addClass('selected').attr("href").replace("javascript:","");
     eval(s);
    }

    //Click a button to change the hash
    $("#buttons li a").click(function(){
            $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
            $(this).addClass('selected');
            document.location.hash=$(this).attr("id")
            //return false;
    });
});

I had hoped the return false; would stop the page from scrolling - but it just makes the link not work at all. So that's just commented out for now so I can navigate.

Any ideas?

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6 Answers

Step 1: You need to defuse the node ID, until the hash has been set. This is done by removing the ID off the node while the hash is being set, and then adding it back on.

hash = hash.replace( /^#/, '' );
var node = $( '#' + hash );
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', '' );
}
document.location.hash = hash;
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', hash );
}

Step 2: Some browsers will trigger the scroll based on where the ID'd node was last seen so you need to help them a little. You need to add an extra div to the top of the viewport, set its ID to the hash, and then roll everything back:

hash = hash.replace( /^#/, '' );
var fx, node = $( '#' + hash );
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', '' );
  fx = $( '<div></div>' )
          .css({
              position:'absolute',
              visibility:'hidden',
              top: $(document).scrollTop() + 'px'
          })
          .attr( 'id', hash )
          .appendTo( document.body );
}
document.location.hash = hash;
if ( node.length ) {
  fx.remove();
  node.attr( 'id', hash );
}

Step 3: Wrap it in a plugin and use that instead of writing to location.hash...

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1  
No, what is happening in step 2 is that a hidden div is created and placed at the current location of the scroll. It's the same visually as position:fixed/top:0. Thus the scrollbar is "moved" to the exact same spot it currently is on. – Borgar Sep 29 '09 at 0:44
3  
This solution indeed works well - however the line: top: $.scroll().top + 'px' Should be: top: $(window).scrollTop() + 'px' – Mark Perkins Jun 25 '10 at 22:52
13  
It would be useful to know which browsers need step 2 here. – djc Nov 5 '10 at 9:51
2  
+1 Excellent work Borgar. – alex Dec 17 '10 at 2:09
1  
Thanks Borgar. It puzzles me though that you're appending the fx div before deleting the target node's id. That means there's an instant in which there are duplicate ID's in the document. Seems like a potential issue, or at least bad manners ;) – Ben Jun 18 '12 at 20:34
show 7 more comments
up vote 43 down vote accepted

I think I may have found a fairly simple solution. The problem is that the hash in the URL is also an element on the page that you get scrolled to. if I just prepend some text to the hash, now it no longer references an existing element!

$(function(){
    //This emulates a click on the correct button on page load
    if(document.location.hash){
     $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
     s=$(document.location.hash.replace("btn_","")).addClass('selected').attr("href").replace("javascript:","");
     eval(s);
    }

    //Click a button to change the hash
    $("#buttons li a").click(function(){
            $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
            $(this).addClass('selected');
            document.location.hash="btn_"+$(this).attr("id")
            //return false;
    });
});

Now the URL appears as page.aspx#btn_elementID which is not a real ID on the page. I just remove "btn_" and get the actual element ID

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3  
Great solution. Most painless of the lot. – Swader Jun 14 '11 at 12:59
Note that if you're already committed to page.aspx#elementID URLs for some reason you can reverse this technique and prepend "btn_" to all of your IDs – joshuahedlund Jun 27 '12 at 14:18
Does not work if you are using :target pseudo-selectors in CSS. – Jason T Featheringham Aug 27 '12 at 23:38

A snippet of your original code:

$("#buttons li a").click(function(){
    $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
    $(this).addClass('selected');
    document.location.hash=$(this).attr("id")
});

Change this to:

$("#buttons li a").click(function(e){
    // need to pass in "e", which is the actual click event
    e.preventDefault();
    // the preventDefault() function ... prevents the default action.
    $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
    $(this).addClass('selected');
    document.location.hash=$(this).attr("id")
});
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If you like progressive enhancement use history.pushState to change the hash. This will not trigger the jump to the associated element.

$("#buttons").on('click', 'a', function(){
        var scrollV, scrollH, $this = $(this);
        $this
           .siblings()
             .removeClass('selected')
             .end()
           .addClass('selected');

        if(history.pushState) { // check if the browser supports the pushState
          history.pushState({}, "", $this.attr('href'));
        } else { // provide a fallback
          scrollV = document.body.scrollTop;
          scrollH = document.body.scrollLeft;
          location.hash = $this.attr('href');
          document.body.scrollTop = scrollV;
          document.body.scrollLeft = scrollH;
        }
});
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I don't think this is possible. As far as I know, the only time a browser doesn't scroll to a changed document.location.hash is if the hash doesn't exist within the page.

This article isn't directly related to your question, but it discusses typical browser behavior of changing document.location.hash

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The other way to do this is to add a div that's hidden at the top of the viewport. This div is then assigned the id of the hash before the hash is added to the url....so then you don't get a scroll.

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