I have a peculiar situation where I am only given control of the contents of a document's <body>. The host, I assume in an effort to remain flexible, is not declaring a doctype which will throw IE into quirks mode immediately. With my limited control over the document, what can I do to force IE to render the page in standards mode?

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3 Answers

I believe you can't do anything about it unless you say, rewrite the contents of the page dynamically with JS and forcefully insert a doctype.

Can you go into specifics of how much control you have over the <body>? Are you allowed to do JS/scripting?

EDIT: Here's an attempt but I didn't test it in IE. It may give you ideas. I document.write() the outerHTML of document.documentElement and it turns the compatMode into CSS1Compat.

You may need to strip out the script block upon rewrite. Like I said, I wouldn't really recommend trying this...

http://medero.org/first-line.html

EDIT #2: It seems to surprisingly work in IE6. But upon refresh, IE caches it somehow and it permanently stays in its .document.write()ed form. To counter that, append it with a query string, eg ?203984234.

Again, I'm not sure what your situation is, but I hope this gives you ideas or helps.

EDIT #3: I rewrote it and bound the document.write to window.onload. You will need to append a unique query string every time you visit it to see the effect, because it caches it after it .write's it.

http://medero.org/rewrite.html?f30324433322111

If you need something more instantaneous you can probably jack jQuery's DOM ready function to rewrite it before the window loads.


Miscellaneous Notes:

  • You could probably hide the entire html document through CSS until the document.write is invoked if visually it matters
  • You should probably strip the <script> document.write before saving outerHTML so that the newly written page doesn't have the script block.
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I doubt this will work. The page has already rendered. If you dynamically add a doctype, IE will have to detect that and choose to rerender the page. If IE was capable of doing that, I would think it's document.documentMode property would not be read only. – Matt Greer Aug 1 '10 at 22:38
I updated with an attempt. – meder Aug 1 '10 at 22:44
Interesting, it looks like it actually works, as scary as that is. Add a div with margin and padding and watch it change size as IE's box model changes. – Matt Greer Aug 1 '10 at 22:49
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Wow! Horrible, but magnificent! ;-) – Marcel Korpel Aug 1 '10 at 23:00
Turns out document.write may be useful for something after all, eh? – meder Aug 1 '10 at 23:28
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Have a look at this Defining Document Compatibility article on MSDN. Perhaps writing out the X-UA-Compatible meta tag will work.

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Late to the party, but I just tried the X-UA-Compatible meta and it worked. I got lucky when I tried it though… apparently you have to put it near the beginning of your HEAD tag ("The X-UA-Compatible header is not case sensitive; however, it must appear in the header of the webpage (the HEAD section) before all other elements except for the title element and other meta elements." goo.gl/xe3Ff). Also, IE "caches" the rendering mode for as long as the browser window is open, so try closing and opening your window. I have control over the HEAD tag though… original poster didn't. – thirdender May 8 at 16:16
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Here's how I managed to solve it, based on meder's answer.

I first tried writing out the X-UA-Compatible meta but that didn't work.

At the end of the document (or in the head, but I didn't have access to that either):

<script type="text/javascript">
if (navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer'){
    window.onload=function(){
        if (document.documentMode == 5){
            contents = document.documentElement.outerHTML;
            newdoc = document.open("text/html", "replace");
            newdoc.writeln('<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">'); 
            newdoc.write(contents);
            newdoc.close();
        }
    };
}
</script>

The inner if is to prevent an infinite loop. It would probably better to strip out the code itself, say by putting it in a function and removing the function call with string.replace(), but I couldn't get that to work so had to settle for this.

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