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I am trying to get post a form to a hidden, dynamically inserted iframe, but in Internet Explorer the form submission opens in a new window.

var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
iframe.name = 'hidden_iframe';
iframe.className = 'NotVisible';
iframe.id = 'hidden_iframe';
document.body.appendChild(iframe);

var my_form = document.getElementById('my_form');
my_form.target = 'hidden_iframe';

This works in Firefox but not IE.

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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

Apparently you need to include the name in the call to createElement. This works in IE and causes an exception in standards compliant browsers. We get:

var iframe;
try {
    iframe = document.createElement('<iframe name="hidden_iframe">');
} catch (ex) {
    iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
    iframe.name='hidden_iframe';
}

iframe.className = 'NotVisible';
iframe.id = 'hidden_iframe';
document.body.appendChild(iframe);

var my_form = document.getElementById('my_form');
my_form.target = 'hidden_iframe';
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+1 for finding something this awful in IE. Which version of IE? 6? 7? 8? – scraimer May 18 '09 at 6:18
Required for IE 6 and 7. IE 8 works either way. – lambacck May 18 '09 at 12:49
Great fix, never would've thought of it. Should've done the least intuitive thing I could think of for IE. – brad Jun 17 '09 at 19:32
unbelievable... I just ran into this issue with Firefox 3.6. Thanks for this answer :) – Hristo Oct 30 '11 at 3:41
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Could this not be more easily accomplished using an a AJAX submit? The iframe approach you're presenting is very hackish and prone to lots of issues.

Here is a JQuery Form plugin that makes doing AJAX submits easy by handling all the serialization of the form values for you.

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I need to get parts of the resulting HTML document. Also I don't think your JQuery Form plugin will work for file uploads (which is the main argument for using the presented technique). – lambacck May 17 '09 at 23:04
jQuery Forms works for file uploads because it uses an IFRAME behind the scenes whenever there is a file input in the form. – Sam May 18 '09 at 6:22
Interesting. Even if that's the case, JQuery Forms works across multiple browsers out of the box. Secondly, you can specify callbacks both pre and post submit, so you could return an an html ajax response on submit. – Soviut May 18 '09 at 8:37
Since I am not using jQuery I still needed a solution. I am not using jQuery because I have an existing code base using MochiKit and I don't want to add yet another 19k resource to the page and this particular page is using Google Maps API so I am not even using MochiKit. Also, I think it is important to know what is going on behind the scenes in these frameworks. – lambacck May 18 '09 at 12:52
Agreed, it is important to know, but at the same time, its good to leverage other people's existing work so you're not reinventing the wheel every time. – Soviut May 18 '09 at 21:43
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