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I'm having an unusual problem with an IE document with contentEditable set to true. Calling select() on a range that is positioned at the end of a text node that immediately precedes a block element causes the selection to be shifted to the right one character and appear where it shouldn't. I've submitted a bug to Microsoft against IE8. If you can, please vote for this issue so that it can be fixed.

https://connect.microsoft.com/IE/feedback/ViewFeedback.aspx?FeedbackID=390995

I've written a test case to demonstrate the effect:

<html>
  <body>
    <iframe id="editable">
      <html>
        <body>
          <div id="test">
            Click to the right of this line -&gt;
            <p id="par">Block Element</p>
          </div>
        </body>
      </html>
    </iframe>
    <input id="mytrigger" type="button" value="Then Click here to Save and Restore" />
    <script type="text/javascript">
        window.onload = function() {
            var iframe = document.getElementById('editable');
            var doc = iframe.contentDocument || iframe.contentWindow.document;

            // An IFRAME without a source points to a blank document.  Here we'll
            // copy the content we stored in between the IFRAME tags into that
            // document.  It's a hack to allow us to use only one HTML file for this
            // test.
            doc.body.innerHTML = iframe.textContent || iframe.innerHTML;

            // Marke the IFRAME as an editable document
            if (doc.body.contentEditable) {
                doc.body.contentEditable = true;
            } else {
                var mydoc = doc;
                doc.designMode = 'On';
            }

            // A function to demonstrate the bug.
            var myhandler = function() {
                // Step 1 Get the current selection
                var selection = doc.selection || iframe.contentWindow.getSelection();
                var range = selection.createRange ? selection.createRange() : selection.getRangeAt(0);

                // Step 2 Restore the selection
                if (range.select) {
                    range.select();
                } else {
                    selection.removeAllRanges();
                    selection.addRange(range);
                    doc.body.focus();
                }
            }

            // Set up the button to perform the test code.
            var button = document.getElementById('mytrigger');
            if (button.addEventListener) {
                button.addEventListener('click', myhandler, false);
            } else {
                button.attachEvent('onclick', myhandler);
            }
          }
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

The problem is exposed in the myhandler function. This is all that I'm doing, there is no Step 3 in between the saving and restoring the selection, and yet the cursor moves. It doesn't seem to happen unless the selection is empty (ie. I have a blinking cursor, but no text), and it only seems to happen whenever the cursor is at the end of a text node that immediately precedes a block node.

It seems that the range is still in the correct position (if I call parentElement on the range it returns the div), but if I get a new range from the current selection, the new range is inside the paragraph tag, and that is its parentElement.

How do I work around this and consistently save and restore the selection in internet explorer?

show/hide this revision's text 9 add reference to filed bug report

I'm having an unusual problem with an IE document with contentEditable set to true. Calling select() on a range that is positioned at the end of a text node that immediately precedes a block element causes the selection to be shifted to the right one character and appear where it shouldn't. I've submitted a bug to Microsoft against IE8. If you can, please vote for this issue so that it can be fixed.

https://connect.microsoft.com/IE/feedback/ViewFeedback.aspx?FeedbackID=390995

I've written a test case to demonstrate the effect:

<html>
  <body>
    <iframe id="editable">
      <html>
        <body>
          <div id="test">
            Click to the right of this line -&gt;
            <p id="par">Block Element</p>
          </div>
        </body>
      </html>
    </iframe>
    <input id="mytrigger" type="button" value="Then Click here to Save and Restore" />
    <script type="text/javascript">
        window.onload = function() {
            var iframe = document.getElementById('editable');
            var doc = iframe.contentDocument || iframe.contentWindow.document;

            // An IFRAME without a source points to a blank document.  Here we'll
            // copy the content we stored in between the IFRAME tags into that
            // document.  It's a hack to allow us to use only one HTML file for this
            // test.
            doc.body.innerHTML = iframe.textContent || iframe.innerHTML;

            // Marke the IFRAME as an editable document
            if (doc.body.contentEditable) {
                doc.body.contentEditable = true;
            } else {
                var mydoc = doc;
                doc.designMode = 'On';
            }

            // A function to demonstrate the bug.
            var myhandler = function() {
                // Step 1 Get the current selection
                var selection = doc.selection || iframe.contentWindow.getSelection();
                var range = selection.createRange ? selection.createRange() : selection.getRangeAt(0);

                // Step 2 Restore the selection
                if (range.select) {
                    range.select();
                } else {
                    selection.removeAllRanges();
                    selection.addRange(range);
                    doc.body.focus();
                }
            }

            // Set up the button to perform the test code.
            var button = document.getElementById('mytrigger');
            if (button.addEventListener) {
                button.addEventListener('click', myhandler, false);
            } else {
                button.attachEvent('onclick', myhandler);
            }
          }
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

The problem is exposed in the myhandler function. This is all that I'm doing, there is no Step 3 in between the saving and restoring the selection, and yet the cursor moves. It doesn't seem to happen unless the selection is empty (ie. I have a blinking cursor, but no text), and it only seems to happen whenever the cursor is at the end of a text node that immediately precedes a block node.

It seems that the range is still in the correct position (if I call parentElement on the range it returns the div), but if I get a new range from the current selection, the new range is inside the paragraph tag, and that is its parentElement. How do I work around this and consistently save and restore the selection in internet explorer?

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