I am currently creating a page where upon clicking a link an iframe is inserted into a div and it's contents loaded. I do this using the following jQuery call:

$('#mydiv').html('<iframe src="sourcelink.html" frameborder="0" width="760" height="2400" scrolling="no"></iframe>');

Sometimes the source content loads very slowly and, as a result, it looks like nothing is happening. I would like to have a simple loading animation while the content is loading while the iframe's content loads. When the iframe finishes loading it's content should pop in and the loading animation should go away.

I've been considering a couple ways I could do this (e.g. having a separate loader div to simply swap the two in and out) but I'm not sure of what the 'best' approach to solving this problem is. Perhaps I shouldn't be using .html()? I'm open to suggestion if there is a more correct solution.

link|improve this question

what is in "sourcelink.html"? Is it a full HTML page? I'm just wondering if it needs to be in an iframe at all – hunter Jan 3 '11 at 18:49
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Is there any reason you can't listen to the onload event of the iframe itself? It should fire after the child content has loaded.

Something like this:

showLoader();
$('#mydiv').html('<iframe src="sourcelink.html" frameborder="0" width="760" height="2400" scrolling="no"></iframe>');
$('#mydiv iframe').load(function() { hideLoader(); }
link|improve this answer
Hey thanks! This was ultimately the approach I took with a slight change. $('#mydiv').html('<iframe src="sourcelink.html" onLoad="hideLoader()" frameborder="0" width="760" height="2400" scrolling="no"></iframe>'); Is it any more or less correct to approach the problem this way? – keybored Jan 5 '11 at 18:51
feedback

You need to define a method that allows your iframe to highlight that it has finished loading, e.g.:

Main page:

var ChildFrameComplete = function()
{
    $("#progress").hide();
};

var LoadChildFrame = function()
{
  $("#progress").show();
  $("#mydiv").html("<iframe src=\"sourcelink.html\" ... ></iframe>");
};

sourcelink.html:

$(function()
{
  parent.ChildFrameComplete();
});

If the iframe is being sourced from the same domain as the parent page domain, it can call methods defined in the parent page through the window.parent property.

link|improve this answer
I had thought to add this point but I can see now that I missed it. The content filling the iframe is not content I have any control over or access to (other than to display it). It comes from a different domain. – keybored Jan 3 '11 at 19:32
feedback

Just give the containing element (this case #myDiv) a background of a throbber and the iframe contents will overlap this when it's done loading.

That's the simplest.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.