I have an application which works heavily on AJAX. However I want to have navigation functionalities in it. To spoof the url, I am changing the location.hash, to generate URL. But if i use back/fwd, only the url changes, but page wont reload. How can I override the hstory.back to reload the page.

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You might want to rename the title of the question to be a bit more specific. How about "Reloading a page with ajax when user clicks the browser back button" or something similar? – Antti Tarvainen Mar 10 '09 at 11:39
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4 Answers

I don't know of any other way than continuous polling to implement this behaviour. An implementation might look like this:

var lastHash = '';

function pollHash() {
    if(lastHash !== location.hash) {
        lastHash = location.hash;
        // hash has changed, so do stuff:
        alert(lastHash);
    }
}

setInterval(pollHash, 100);
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Thanks, it's very useful. A small improvement can be added to it, if you wrap the whole expression in a function statement which you invoke immediately, and the return value of that function would be the function you wrote. This way you can eliminate a global binding. – Török Gábor May 22 '09 at 10:19
I think this is what Török was talking about. Seems to work fine. Feels a little cleaner because of the encapsulation. var hashChecker = function(){ lastHash = location.hash; return setInterval(function() { if(lastHash !== location.hash) { lastHash = location.hash; } }, 50); }() – Derek Gathright Feb 6 '10 at 10:21
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You can't exactly capture the back event, but most of these problems have been solved - and a good thing too, it's a hard problem.

Take a look at really simple history (aka RSH) and either implement it or work through it to see how it works.

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The answer for this question will be more or less the same as my answers for these questions:

In summary, two projects that you'll probably want to look at which explain the whole hashchange process and using it with ajax are:

  • jQuery History (using hashes to manage your pages state and bind to changes to update your page).

  • jQuery Ajaxy (ajax extension for jQuery History, to allow for complete ajax websites while being completely unobtrusive and gracefully degradable).

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The balupton answers are really great.

But you also have another jQuery Plugin to handle your ajax requests, it is address.

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