110

Does anyone know a work around to make animated GIF's continue to be animated after you click a link or submit a form on the page your on in IE? This works fine in other browsers.

Thanks.

5
  • 3
    The only right answer on here is @AnthonyWJones. For POSTs, actual submits (not ajax) nothing works. Jun 1, 2011 at 18:24
  • Actually that is not true at all. Using a timeout to show the image on the onsubmit event works just fine with form POST.
    – oldwizard
    Jan 24, 2013 at 8:27
  • @P.Brian.Mackey - solution by j.davis worked for me for even a post request. However we are also using ajaxcontrol toolkit to make a call to server side method. It doesn't work in that case.
    – Ankur-m
    Jan 2, 2014 at 6:54
  • possible duplicate of Update Progress animated gif stops on postback Jul 22, 2014 at 23:51
  • Check out Jourdan's answer here. I think it is a better solution and it works on downlevel IE too. Jul 22, 2014 at 23:56

16 Answers 16

99

The accepted solution did not work for me.

After some more research I came across this workaround, and it actually does work.

Here is the gist of it:

function showProgress() {
    var pb = document.getElementById("progressBar");
    pb.innerHTML = '<img src="./progress-bar.gif" width="200" height ="40"/>';
    pb.style.display = '';
}

and in your html:

<input type="submit" value="Submit" onclick="showProgress()" />
<div id="progressBar" style="display: none;">
    <img src="./progress-bar.gif" width="200" height ="40"/>
</div>

So when the form is submitted, the <img/> tag is inserted, and for some reason it is not affected by the ie animation issues.

Tested in Firefox, ie6, ie7 and ie8.

15
  • 3
  • 8
    In your code you never actually perform a POST. Only the "onclick=" javascript call. I tried this with a POST as is expected when you click submit and it does not work. Jun 1, 2011 at 18:20
  • Unless you are returning false at the end of your onclick, the submit button will trigger a POST. That is what submit buttons do.
    – Frug
    Dec 14, 2011 at 18:52
  • 2
    -1 This answer is WRONG too. It does not work in IE7 and IE8 the gif image FREZEES after form submission. Feb 4, 2012 at 12:58
  • 2
    This worked for me using jQuery. The hack is pretty weird, I have to admit. This is how it worked in my example: code <div id="img_content"> <img id='aj_loader' src='assets/2631.gif' style="display:none;"/> </div> And then: code $("#img_content").html($("#img_content").html()); Mar 16, 2012 at 14:16
35

old question, but posting this for fellow googlers:

Spin.js DOES WORK for this use case: http://fgnass.github.com/spin.js/

4
  • Correction, it works but stops animating right before the page loads. So if it's a short load it looks like the animation freezes like in the original issue. Sep 12, 2011 at 17:12
  • Great solution, working fine in ie11 so still seems all up to date and supported. Feb 25, 2014 at 15:27
  • spin.js unfortunately is quite CPU intensive. See issues/8, issues/200, issues/215
    – user247702
    Aug 13, 2015 at 14:00
  • Spin.js isn't working for me on iPhone. It also freezes as soon as a the page is redirected to another one.
    – Ankur-m
    Dec 31, 2015 at 9:58
18

IE assumes that the clicking of a link heralds a new navigation where the current page contents will be replaced. As part of the process for perparing for that it halts the code that animates the GIFs. I doubt there is anything you can do about it (unless you aren't actually navigating in which case use return false in the onclick event).

5
  • +1 - I tried both top answers. Neither works. I'm not going to make all my Form submits into ajax requests. Jun 1, 2011 at 18:26
  • 2
    +1 I agree, this is the only real right answer, except for spin.js and CodeMonkey workarounds. Feb 4, 2012 at 12:59
  • This IE issues was there in IE6 and still there in IE7/8. Does someone know if it's still there in IE9? Feb 4, 2012 at 13:25
  • And still in 2016! Jun 23, 2016 at 15:20
  • 2
    2017 checking in! Feb 17, 2017 at 19:33
17

Here's a jsFiddle that works just fine on form submit with method="post". The spinner is added on form submit event.

$("form").bind("submit", onFormSubmit);

function onFormSubmit() {
    setTimeout(showSpinner, 1);
}

function showSpinner() {
    $("body").append($('<img id="spinner" src="spinner.gif" alt="Spinner" />'));
}

See jsFiddle code here

Test it in your IE browser here

3
  • 2
    Yes, this works great (only tested in IE 10 so far). But I cannot work out why animation is stopped when I preload the image in memory. I can preload in your fiddle and it works OK, just not in my code, argh.
    – Simon E.
    Oct 7, 2013 at 3:20
  • You did something wrong. :) Add the spinner image as an img tag to your page? I've updated the url. Might help.
    – oldwizard
    Oct 7, 2013 at 9:29
  • IE is just a jerk it seems. Stops the animation when pre-loaded. When injected via jquery, animation will continue chugging along. Thanks for this solution.
    – Anthony
    May 30, 2017 at 13:03
8

I came upon this post, and while it has already been answered, felt I should post some information that helped me with this problem specific to IE 10, and might help others arriving at this post with a similar problem.

I was baffled how animated gifs were just not displaying in IE 10 and then found this gem.

ToolsInternet OptionsAdvancedMultiMediaPlay animations in webpages

hope this helps.

2
  • Nope, that does not solve the problem in IE11 (but +1 for trying to help)! :( That is -- I have this option enabled and animated GIFs are not animated, when shown in beforeunload or unload event.
    – trejder
    Dec 15, 2014 at 14:44
  • 1
    This has nothing to do with the problem posed in the question.
    – user247702
    Aug 13, 2015 at 14:17
2

I encountered this problem when trying to show a loading gif while a form submit was processing. It had an added layer of fun in that the same onsubmit had to run a validator to make sure the form was correct. Like everyone else (on every IE/gif form post on the internet) I couldn't get the loading spinner to "spin" in IE (and, in my case, validate/submit the form). While looking through advice on http://www.west-wind.com I found a post by ev13wt that suggested the problem was "... that IE doesn't render the image as animated cause it was invisible when it was rendered." That made sense. His solution:

Leave blank where the gif would go and use JavaScript to set the source in the onsubmit function - document.getElementById('loadingGif').src = "path to gif file".

Here's how I implemented it:

<script type="text/javascript">
    function validateForm(form) {

        if (isNotEmptyid(form.A)) {
            if (isLen4(form.B)) {        
                if (isNotEmptydt(form.C)) {
                    if (isNumber(form.D)) {        
                        if (isLen6(form.E)){
                            if (isNotEmptynum(form.F)) {
                                if (isLen5(form.G)){
                                    document.getElementById('tabs').style.display = "none";                
                                    document.getElementById('dvloader').style.display = "block";                
                                    document.getElementById('loadingGif').src = "/images/ajax-loader.gif"; 
                                    return true;
                                }
                            }
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        return false;   
    }               
</script>

<form name="payo" action="process" method="post" onsubmit="return validateForm(this)">
    <!-- FORM INPUTS... -->
    <input type="submit" name="submit" value=" Authorize ">

    <div style="display:none" id="dvloader">  
        <img id="loadingGif" src="" alt="Animated Image that appears during processing of document." />
        Working... this process may take several minutes.
    </div>

</form>

This worked well for me in all browsers!

1
  • Setting src worked for me as well in IE11. In my case, it is in combination with re-adding the img html first. I'm not sure why I need both. It is interesting to note that I am also setting 'display' (to block), as opposed to modifying 'visibility'.
    – Xtopher
    Aug 12, 2016 at 17:11
2

Here's what I did. All you have to to is to break up your GIF to say 10 images (in this case i started with 01.gif and ended with 10.gif) and specify the directory where you keep them.

HTML:

<div id="tester"></div>

JavaScript:

function pad2(number) {   
    return (number < 10 ? '0' : '') + number 
}
var 
    dirURL = 'path/to/your/images/folder',
    ajaxLoader = document.createElement('img');
ajaxLoader.className = 'ajax-image-loader';
jQuery(document).ready(function(){
    jQuery('#tester').append(ajaxLoader);
    set(0);
});
function set(i) {
    if (i > 10) i = 1;    
    img.src = dirURL + pad2(i) + '.gif';
    setTimeout(function() {
        set(++i);
    }, 100);    
}

This method works with IE7, IE8 and IE9 (althought for IE9 you could use spin.js). NOTE: I have not tested this in IE6 since I have no machine running a browser from the 60s, although the method is so simple it probably works even in IE6 and lower.

1
  • 1
    This workaround works, based on same principle of spin,js basically using a JS setTimeout to simulate a gif animation. Feb 4, 2012 at 12:54
2

Found this solution at http://timexwebdev.blogspot.com/2009/11/html-postback-freezes-animated-gifs.html and it WORKS! Simply re-load image before setting to visible. Call the following Javascript function from your button's onclick:

function showLoader()
{
   //*** Reload the image for IE ***
   document.getElementById('loader').src='./images/loader.gif';
   //*** Let's make the image visible ***
   document.getElementById('loader').style.visibility = 'visible';
}
1
  • Although this does work in at least IE11 I've noticed some issues when I tested Firefox 85 running on various versions of Windows. This was on BrowserStack though so take that with a pinch of salt.
    – Bower
    Feb 27, 2021 at 0:12
1

Related to this I had to find a fix where animated gifs were used as a background image to ensure styling was kept to the stylesheet. A similar fix worked for me there too... my script went something like this (I'm using jQuery to make it easier to get the computed background style - how to do that without jQuery is a topic for another post):

var spinner = <give me a spinner element>

window.onbeforeunload = function() {
  bg_image = $(spinner).css('background-image');
  spinner.style.backgroundImage = 'none';
  spinner.style.backgroundImage = bg_image;
}

[EDIT] With a bit more testing I've just realised that this doesn't work with background images in IE8. I've been trying everything I can think of to get IE8 to render a gif animation wile loading a page, but it doesn't look possible at this time.

2
  • Why you're reading CSS code using jQuery ($(spinner).css('background-image')), but instead of setting it the same way, you're using pure Javascript way (spinner.style.backgroundImage). Your code is not working for me in any browser. If I use directly your code, then I'm getting cannot set backgroundImage property of undefined error. If I change your code to set CSS using jQuery, code runs without any errors, but image is not reset and div / spinner element remains empty. I don't know, why?
    – trejder
    Dec 16, 2014 at 12:02
  • Verified! There is no chance, your code will work. No browser is not able (as of December 2014) to set background-image property in unload or beforeunload events. See this question or this jsFiddle for details.
    – trejder
    Dec 16, 2014 at 13:45
1

Building on @danfolkes' answer, this worked for me in IE 8 and ASP.NET MVC3.

In our _Layout.cshtml

<body style="min-width: 800px">
    <div id="progress">
        <div style="min-height: 200px">
        </div>
        <div id="throbber">
            <img src="..\..\Content\ajax-loader.gif" alt="Progress" style="display: block;
                margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto" />
        </div>
    </div>
    <div id="main">

<<< content here >>> ...

<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
    function ShowThrobber() {
        $('#main').hide();
        $('#progress').show();
        // Work around IE bug which freezes gifs
        if (navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer') {
            // Work around IE bug which freezes gifs
            $("#throbber").html('<img src="../../Content/ajax-loader.gif" alt="Progress" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"/>');
         }
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
    function HideThrobber() {
        $('#main').show();
        $('#progress').hide();
    }
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
    $(document).ready(function () {
        HideThrobber();
    });
</script>

And in our navigation links:

<input type="submit" value="Finish" class="submit-link" onclick="ShowThrobber()"/>

or

@Html.ActionLink("DoSometthing", "MyController", new { Model.SomeProperty }, new { onclick = "ShowThrobber()" })
0
0

I realize that this is an old question and that by now the original posters have each found a solution that works for them, but I ran across this issue and found that VML tags do not fall victim to this IE bug. Animated GIFs still move during page unload when placed on the IE browser using VML tags.

Notice I detected VML first before making the decision to use VML tags so this is working in FireFox and other browsers using normal animated GIF behavior.

Here's how I solved this.

<input class="myExitButton" type="button" value="Click me"  />

<div class="loadingNextPage" style="display:none" >
    <span style="left:-24px; POSITION: relative; WIDTH: 48px; DISPLAY: inline-block; HEIGHT: 48px" class="spinnerImageVml"><?xml:namespace prefix="rvml" ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:vml" /><rvml:group style="POSITION: absolute; WIDTH: 48px; HEIGHT: 48px; rotation: 1deg" class="rvml" coordsize = "47,47"><rvml:image style="POSITION: absolute; WIDTH: 48px; HEIGHT: 48px; TOP: 0px; LEFT: 0px" class="rvml" src="/images/loading_gray.gif" coordsize="21600,21600"></rvml:image></rvml:group></span>
    <img class="spinnerImage" src="/images/loading_gray.gif" alt="loading..." />
    <div>Just one moment while we access this information...</div>
</div>

<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
    window.LoadProgress = (function (progress, $) {

        var getdialogHeight = function (height) {
            var isIE = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf('msie') > -1;
            if (isIE) {
                return height + 'px';
            }
            return height;
        };

        var isVmlSupported = function () {
            var a = document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('div'));
            a.innerHTML = '<v:shape id="vml_flag1" adj="1" />';
            var b = a.firstChild;
            b.style.behavior = "url(#default#VML)";
            var supported = b ? typeof b.adj == "object" : true;
            a.parentNode.removeChild(a);
            return supported;
        };

        var showAnimationDuringPageUnload = function () {
            if (isVmlSupported()) {
                $(".loadingNextPage > .spinnerImage").hide();
            }
            else {
                $(".loadingNextPage > .spinnerImageVml").hide();
            }
        };

        var openLoadingMessage = function () {
            $(".loadingNextPage").dialog({
                modal: true,
                closeOnEscape: true,
                title: 'Please wait...',
                closeText: 'x',
                height: getdialogHeight(200),
                buttons: {
                    "Close": function () {
                        $(this).dialog("close");
                    }
                }
            });
        };

        $('.myExitButton').click(function () {
            openLoadingMessage();
            showAnimationDuringPageUnload();
            window.location.href = 'http://www.stackoverflow.com';
        });


        return progress;
    })(window.LoadProgress || {}, window.jQuery);
</script>

Naturally, this relies on jQuery, jQueryUI and requires an animated GIF of some type ("/images/loading_gray.gif").

0

Jquery:

$("#WhereYouWantTheImageToAppear").html('<img src="./Animated.gif" />');
0
0

Just had a similar issue. These worked perfectly for me.

$('#myElement').prepend('<img src="/path/to/img.gif" alt="My Gif" title="Loading" />');

$('<img src="/path/to/img.gif" alt="My Gif" title="Loading" />').prependTo('#myElement');

Another idea was to use jQuery's .load(); to load and then prepend the image.

Works in IE 7+

0

Very, very late to answer this one, but I've just discovered that using a background-image that is encoded as a base64 URI in the CSS, rather than held as a separate image, continues to animate in IE8.

0
0

A very easy way is to use jQuery and SimpleModal plugin. Then when I need to show my "loading" gif on submit, I do:

$('*').css('cursor','wait');
$.modal("<table style='white-space: nowrap'><tr><td style='white-space: nowrap'><b>Please wait...</b></td><td><img alt='Please wait' src='loader.gif' /></td></tr></table>", {escClose:false} );
-1

I had this same problem, common also to other borwsers like Firefox. Finally I discovered that dynamically create an element with animated gif inside at form submit did not animate, so I developed the following workaorund.

1) At document.ready(), each FORM found in page, receive position:relative property and then to each one is attached an invisible DIV.bg-overlay.

2) After this, assuming that each submit value of my website is identified by btn-primary css class, again at document.ready(), I look for these buttons, traverse to the FORM parent of each one, and at form submit, I fire showOverlayOnFormExecution(this,true); function, passing clicked button and a boolean that toggle visibility of DIV.bg-overlay.

$(document).ready(function() {

  //Append LOADING image to all forms
  $('form').css('position','relative').append('<div class="bg-overlay" style="display:none;"><img src="/images/loading.gif"></div>');

  //At form submit, fires a specific function
  $('form .btn-primary').closest('form').submit(function (e) {
    showOverlayOnFormExecution(this,true);
  });
});

CSS for DIV.bg-overlay is the following:

.bg-overlay
{
  width:100%;
  height:100%;
  position:absolute;
  top:0;
  left:0;
  background:rgba(255,255,255,0.6);
  z-index:100;
}

.bg-overlay img
{
  position:absolute;
  left:50%;
  top:50%;
  margin-left:-40px; //my loading images is 80x80 px. This is done to center it horizontally and vertically.
  margin-top:-40px;
  max-width:auto;
  max-height:80px;
}

3) At any form submit, the following function is fired to show a semi-white background overlay all over it (that deny ability to interact again with form) and an animated gif inside it (that visually show a loading action).

function showOverlayOnFormExecution(clicked_button, showOrNot) 
{
    if(showOrNot == 1)
    {
        //Add "content" of #bg-overlay_container (copying it) to the confrm that contains clicked button 
        $(clicked_button).closest('form').find('.bg-overlay').show();
    }
    else
        $('form .bg-overlay').hide();
}

Showing animated gif at form submit, instead of appending it at this event, solves "gif animation freeze" problem of various browsers (as said, I found this problem in IE and Firefox, not in Chrome)

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