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I have been getting some weird page refresh in deployment and I can't seem to find the cause of it or replicate it in development. Is there a way for a javascript error or exception to cause a page reload? Or some tips to help me narrow down the cause?

It happens when deployed in the field and I can't replicate it while testing locally. I know it's happening as I'm logging exceptions using ELMAH. User is using Firefox.

UrlReferrer: example.com/products/edit/100

Url of GET: example.com/products/edit/undefined

And I don't see any javascript code in the form of window.location = '/products/edit/' + id, (where id might be undefined) that could be called from that page.

But there are calls like the above elsewhere. I hope that made sense. :)

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    Which browser are you testing with? Is it occurring in all browsers? Do you have any refreshing/reloading code in your JS anywhere? Have you tried using Firebug/IE dev tools/Chrome dev tools to step through the code?
    – Andy E
    May 9, 2010 at 14:09
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    @Andy - Step away from the coffee! If you just pop in and read that, it sounds like a co-worker on a caffeine craze May 9, 2010 at 14:12
  • @Nick - Then let's put it simple; OP, can you provide us with an example, like some code or a link? May 9, 2010 at 14:17
  • Added some more details to question. Hmmm. I can't really post the log.
    – sean
    May 9, 2010 at 14:21
  • @Nick: yeah maybe I should have slowed it down a bit ;-)
    – Andy E
    May 9, 2010 at 15:02

2 Answers 2

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No, there is no Javascript error that by itself would cause a page to reload. There is no reason for the browser to reload the page if an error occurs, the only thing that it could hope to achieve by that is to cause the same error to happen again.

So, the only reason that a Javscript error could cause a reload is if the script is preventing a reload when it's working properly, or if it normally causes a reload in some specific situation and fails to limit it to that situation.

Example: If you have code that prevents a click from causing a postback:

<a href="page.html" onclick="return false;">

If there was an error in the script it would no longer prevent the reload.

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  • That's something I did not consider. Ok, will have a lookover the code again.
    – sean
    May 9, 2010 at 14:29
  • +1 for correctness - though if you're screwing up return false;, it's time to call it a day, get coffee, come back later :) May 9, 2010 at 14:35
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    @Andy - hahaha, well played sir May 9, 2010 at 15:12
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The question has already been answered, but I wanted to add a suggestion on debugging this behaviour.

I am using Firefox / Firebug for a lot of JS development, and sometimes I will see an exception raised in Firebug right before the page submits and there's nothing I can do about it. If I have 100s of lines of JS in response to an event I don't want to step through it all looking for the 1 line that contains an error and causes a reload.

Once I can replicate the error I use Fiddler to set a breakpoint on a url (e.g. bpu localhost which will halt any requests headed for localhost. Even though the browser has submitted it still provides access to Firebug so I can inspect the error while Fiddler holds the request.

Hope this helps someone

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    @redolent it's an extremely useful (and free) .net tool for monitoring, trapping, and altering HTTP requests and responses on your machine. It's web development's missing piece and its place is between your browser debugger (Firebug, Chrome tools) and server-side debugger (VS, Eclipse, x-debug). It can teach you a lot about HTTP and also help you test your application without altering code or writing a test harness. fiddler2.com/fiddler2
    – tomfumb
    Mar 5, 2013 at 1:46

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