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I am using jquery dialogs to present forms (fetched via AJAX). On some forms I am using a CKEditor for the textareas. The editor displays fine on the first load.

When the user cancels the dialog, I am removing the contents so that they are loaded fresh on a later request. The issue is, once the dialog is reloaded, the CKEditor claims the editor already exists.

uncaught exception: [CKEDITOR.editor] The instance "textarea_name" already exists.

The API includes a method for destroying existing editors, and I have seen people claiming this is a solution:

if (CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name']) {
CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name'].destroy();
}
CKEDITOR.replace('textarea_name');

This is not working for me, as I receive a new error instead:

TypeError: Result of expression 'i.contentWindow' [null] is not an object.

This error seems to occur on the "destroy()" rather than the "replace()". Has anyone experienced this and found a different solution?

Is is possible to 're-render' the existing editor, rather than destroying and replacing it?

UPDATED Here is another question dealing with the same problem, but he has provided a downloadable test case.

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Hi, I added a new answer to your question. Hope it helps, I was having some of problems with this too. – Smickie Sep 13 '10 at 15:01
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18 Answers

function loadEditor(id)
{
    var instance = CKEDITOR.instances[id];
    if(instance)
    {
        CKEDITOR.remove(instance);
    }
    CKEDITOR.replace(id);
}
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This caused me a bit of grief, but your solution helped out. Thanks! – Ben Scheirman Apr 26 '10 at 15:55
I had a similar problem in firefox which had three instances of the CKEditor on the page, the first one was not displaying but the other two where, I added the above code and all teh editors now appear – Craig Angus Apr 29 '10 at 15:56
2  
Don't use CKEDITOR.remove because it only clears the element from the array, but leaves all the DOM in memory. It's stated in the docs that it's meant for internal use: docs.cksource.com/ckeditor_api/symbols/CKEDITOR.html#.remove You should use instead instace.destroy() as madhaviaddanki said. – AlfonsoML Jun 29 '10 at 11:04
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I had this problem too, but I solved it in a much simpler way...

I was using the class ".ckeditor" in the jQuery as the selector for which textares's I wanted ckeditorized.

The default ckeditor js you include before the also uses this class to identify which textareas to ckeditoriz. This means both your jQuery ckeditor function and the default ckeditor js are trying to run on the textarea.

What you need to do is simply change the class of the jQuery, I use '.do_ckeditor' and remove the 'ckeditor' class from your html.

I was pulling my hair out about this and felt the need to come back and post this answer.

Hope this helps.

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I've had similar issue where we were making several instances of CKeditor for the content loaded via ajax.

CKEDITOR.remove()

Kept the DOM in the memory and didn't remove all the bindings.

CKEDITOR.instance[instance_id].destroy()

Gave the error i.contentWindow error whenever I create new instance with new data from ajax. But this was only until I figured out that I was destroying the instance after clearing the DOM.

Use destroy() while the instance & it's DOM is present on the page, then it works perfectly fine.

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For this to work you need to pass boolen parameter true when destroying instance:

    var editor = CKEDITOR.instances[name];
    if (editor) { editor.destroy(true); }
    CKEDITOR.replace(name);
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Perhaps this will help you out - I've done something similar using jquery, except I'm loading up an unknown number of ckeditor objects. It took my a while to stumble onto this - it's not clear in the documentation.

function loadEditors() {
    var $editors = $("textarea.ckeditor");
    if ($editors.length) {
        $editors.each(function() {
            var editorID = $(this).attr("id");
            var instance = CKEDITOR.instances[editorID];
            if (instance) { CKEDITOR.remove(instance); }
            CKEDITOR.replace(editorID);
        });
    }
}

And here is what I run to get the content from the editors:

    var $editors = $("textarea.ckeditor");
    if ($editors.length) {
        $editors.each(function() {
            var instance = CKEDITOR.instances[$(this).attr("id")];
            if (instance) { $(this).val(instance.getData()); }
        });
    }
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This seems to have removed the errors, but on the second rendering the textarea now contains 'null' and I can no longer interact with the toolbar or the textarea. If I do click on toolbar buttons I receive errors like: "TypeError: Result of expression 'this.$.focus' [undefined] is not a function" -or- "TypeError: Result of expression 'this.document.getWindow().$' [undefined] is not an object". Where/when do you call that function? I have my script inline with the jquery loaded content. (ckeditor.js in the head of the parent html) – jackboberg Nov 25 '09 at 13:30
I call this after all textareas have been added to the page and filled with content. – ScottE Nov 25 '09 at 13:34
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This is the simplest (and only) solution that worked for me:

if(CKEDITOR.instances[editorName])
   delete CKEDITOR.instances[editorName];
CKEDITOR.replace(editorName);

Deleting this entry in the array prevents this form safety check from destroying your application.

destroy() and remove() did not work for me.

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This is the only solution that worked with me also, thanks for posting it! – Michael Robinson Aug 10 '10 at 5:30
I did get destroy() to work. But neither delete or destroy() fully clean up the editor instance. Things like the dictionary and other associated objects will still lurk around. – adu Aug 12 '10 at 21:51
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var e= CKEDITOR.instances['sample']; e.destroy(); e= null;

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I learned that

delete CKEDITOR.instances[editorName];

by itself, actually removed the instance. ALL other methods i have read and seen, including what was found here at stackoverflow from its users, did not work for me.

In my situation, im using an ajax call to pull a copy of the content wrapped around the and 's. The problem happens to be because i am using a jQuery .live event to bind a "Edit this document" link and then applying the ckeditor instance after success of the ajax load. This means, that when i click another link a link with another .live event, i must use the delete CKEDITOR.instances[editorName] as part of my task of clearing the content window (holding the form), then re-fetching content held in the database or other resource.

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I chose to rename all instances instead of destroy/replace - since sometimes the AJAX loaded instance doesn't really replace the one on the core of the page... keeps more in RAM, but less conflict this way.

    if (CKEDITOR && CKEDITOR.instances) {
        for (var oldName in CKEDITOR.instances) {
            var newName = "ajax"+oldName;
            CKEDITOR.instances[newName] = CKEDITOR.instances[oldName];
            CKEDITOR.instances[newName].name = newName;
            delete CKEDITOR.instances[oldName];
        }
    }
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For ajax requests,

 for(k in CKEDITOR.instances){
    var instance = CKEDITOR.instances[k];
    instance.destroy()
 }
  CKEDITOR.replaceAll();

this snipped removes all instances from document. Then creates new instances.

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CKEDITOR.instances = new Array();

I am using this before my calls to create an instance (ones per page load). Not sure how this affects memory handling and what not. This would only work if you wanted to replace all of the instances on a page.

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Indeed, removing the ".ckeditor" class from your code solves the issue. Most of us followed the jQuery integration example from the ckeditor's documentation:

$('.jquery_ckeditor')
.ckeditor( function() { /* callback code */ }, { skin : 'office2003' } );

and thought "... maybe I can just get rid or the '.jquery_' part".

I've been wasting my time tweaking the callback function (because the {skin:'office2003'} actually worked), while the problem was coming from elsewhere.

I think the documentation should mention that the use of "ckeditor" as a class name is not recommended, because it is a reserved keyword.

Cheers.

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I had the same problem where I was receiving a null reference exception and the word "null" would be displayed in the editor. I tried a handful of solutions, including upgrading the editor to 3.4.1 to no avail.

I ended up having to edit the source. At about line 416 to 426 in _source\plugins\wysiwygarea\plugin.js, there's a snippet like this:

iframe = CKEDITOR.dom.element.createFromHtml( '&lt;iframe' + ... + '></iframe>' );

In FF at least, the iframe isn't completely instantiated by the time it's needed. I surrounded the rest of the function after that line with a setTimeout function:

iframe = CKEDITOR.dom.element.createFromHtml( '<iframe' + ... + '></iframe>' );
setTimeout(function()
{ 
    // Running inside of Firefox chrome the load event doesn't bubble like in a normal page (#5689)
    ...
}, 1000);

};

// The script that launches the bootstrap logic on 'domReady', so the document
...

The text renders consistently now in the modal dialogs.

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I hade the same problem with a jQuery Dialog.

Why destroy the instance if you just want to remove previous data ?

function clearEditor(id)
{
  var instance = CKEDITOR.instances[id];
  if(instance)
  {
    instance.setData( '' );
  }
}
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To support dynamic (Ajax) loading of forms (without page refreshes between) which contain textareas with the same (same form is called again) or different ID's (previously unloaded form) and convert them to CKEditor elements I did the following (using the JQuery adapter):

After the page has finished every Ajax call that delivers a textarea to be converted, I make a call to the following function:

setupCKeditor()

This looks like this (it assumes your textareas to be converted to RTE's have class="yourCKClass"):

    /* Turns textAreas into TinyMCE Rich Text Editors where
 * class: tinymce applied to textarea.
 */
function setupCKeditor(){

    // define editor configuration      
    var config = {skin : 'kama'};

    // Remove and recreate any existing CKEditor instances
    var count = 0;
    if (CKEDITOR.instances !== 'undefined') {
        for(var i in CKEDITOR.instances) {

            var oEditor   = CKEDITOR.instances[i];
            var editorName = oEditor.name;

             // Get the editor data.
            var data = $('#'+editorName).val();

            // Check if current instance in loop is the same as the textarea on current page
            if ($('textarea.yourCKClass').attr('id') == editorName) {
                if(CKEDITOR.instances[editorName]) {

                    // delete and recreate the editor
                    delete CKEDITOR.instances[editorName];
                    $('#'+editorName).ckeditor(function() { },config);
                    count++;

                }
            }   


        }
    }

    // If no editor's exist in the DOM, create any that are needed.             
    if (count == 0){

        $('textarea.yourCKClass').each( function(index) {

                var editorName = $(this).attr('id');
                $('#'+editorName).ckeditor(function() { $('#'+editorName).val(data); },config);

            });

    }


}

I should mention that the line:

$('#'+editorName).ckeditor(function() { $('#'+editorName).val(data); },config);

could (and should) be simply:

$('#'+editorName).ckeditor(function() { },config);

however I found that the editor would often show the correct content for a second after loading and them empty the editor of the desired content. So that line with the callback code forces the CKEditor content to be the same as the originating textarea content. Causes a flicker when used. If you can avoid using it, do so..

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The i.contentWindow is null error seems to occur when calling destroy on an editor instance that was tied to a textarea no longer in the DOM.

CKEDITORY.destroy takes a parameter noUpdate.

The APIdoc states:

If the instance is replacing a DOM element, this parameter indicates whether or not to update the element with the instance contents.

So, to avoid the error, either call destroy before removing the textarea element from the DOM, or call destory(true) to avoid trying to update the non-existent DOM element.

if (CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name']) {
   CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name'].destroy(true);
}

(using version 3.6.2 with jQuery adapter)

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I had exactly the same problem like jackboberg. I was using dynamic form loading into jquery dialogs then attaching various widgets (datepickers, ckeditors etc...). And I tried all solutions noted above, none of them worked for me.

For some reason ckeditor only attached the first time I loaded form, the second time I got exactly the same error message jackboberg did.

I've analyzed my code and discovered that if you attach ckeditor in "mid-air" that is while form content is still not placed into dialog, ckeditor won't properly attach its bindings. That is since ckeditor is attached in "mid-air", second time you attach it in "mid-air"... poof ... an error is thrown since the first instance was not properly removed from DOM.

This was my code that ptoduced the error:

var $content = $(r.content); // jQuery can create DOM nodes from html text gotten from <xhr response> - so called "mid-air" DOM creation
$('.rte-field',$content).ckeditor(function(){});
$content.dialog();

This is the fix that worked:

var $content = $(r.content).dialog(); // first create dialog
$('.rte-field',$content).ckeditor(function(){}); // then attach ckeditor widget
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I ran into this exact same thing and the problem was that the wordcount plugin was taking too long to initialize. 30+ seconds. The user would click into the view displaying the ckeditor, then cancel, thereby ajax-loading a new page into the dom. The plugin was complaining because the iframe or whatever contentWindow is pointing to was no longer visible by the time it was ready to add itself to the contentWindow. You can verify this by clicking into your view and then waiting for the Word Count to appear in the bottom right of the editor. If you cancel now, you won't have a problem. If you don't wait for it, you'll get the i.contentWindow is null error. To fix it, just scrap the plugin:

if (CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name']) 
{
   CKEDITOR.instances['textarea_name'].destroy();
}
CKEDITOR.replace('textarea_name', { removePlugins: "wordcount" } );

If you need a word counter, register for the paste and keyup events on the editor with a function that counts the words.

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