667

IE9 Bug - JavaScript only works after opening developer tools once.

Our site offers free pdf downloads to users, and it has a simple "enter password to download" function. However, it doesn't work at all in Internet Explorer.

You can see for yourself in this example.

The download pass is "makeuseof". In any other browser, it works fine. In IE, both buttons do nothing.

The most curious thing I've found is that if you open and close the developer toolbar with F12, it all suddenly starts to work.

We've tried compatibility mode and such, nothing makes a difference.

How do I make this work in Internet Explorer?

5
  • 4
    use cross-browser wrapper: github.com/MichaelZelensky/log.js Feb 18, 2014 at 16:15
  • 3
    A good alternative, if you have a build step, is to use something like gulp-strip-debug. It removes all console.* methods, great for production builds, or testing in IE. Jul 13, 2014 at 2:05
  • 17
    For future googlers: I had the same symptoms, but in IE11. Well, it turned out that the answer was not related to console, but to my use of angular and caching of get requests. See answers here and here for more. Sep 10, 2014 at 19:49
  • 1
    @ChristofferLette Yes, i have the same issue please check stackoverflow.com/questions/31428126/… code works properly when developers tools is opened.. Jul 15, 2015 at 13:38
  • 8
    The most annoying thing about problems like this? They're almost impossible to debug because it starts working as soon as you open the developer console.
    – jlewkovich
    Nov 4, 2016 at 13:40

12 Answers 12

834

It sounds like you might have some debugging code in your javascript.

The experience you're describing is typical of code which contain console.log() or any of the other console functionality.

The console object is only activated when the Dev Toolbar is opened. Prior to that, calling the console object will result in it being reported as undefined. After the toolbar has been opened, the console will exist (even if the toolbar is subsequently closed), so your console calls will then work.

There are a few solutions to this:

The most obvious one is to go through your code removing references to console. You shouldn't be leaving stuff like that in production code anyway.

If you want to keep the console references, you could wrap them in an if() statement, or some other conditional which checks whether the console object exists before trying to call it.

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  • 9
    Are there any workarounds for leaving debugging code in? IE is the only browser with this inane behavior...
    – Meekohi
    Feb 21, 2012 at 23:27
  • 95
    if(!console) {console={}; console.log = function(){};}
    – Meekohi
    Feb 21, 2012 at 23:40
  • 82
    @Meekohi if(!console) will cause the same error - it should read if(!window.console) Aug 14, 2012 at 12:55
  • 11
    so... IE should didn't implement a feature that every new js dev uses all the time, to avoid annoying a few devs that used a script to fix the thing that should have worked in the first place... but it's unfair to knock IE for that? You are a very generous person Spudley!!! :) Feb 6, 2015 at 13:38
  • 8
    Still happens with IE11
    – Michael
    Sep 30, 2016 at 11:55
167

HTML5 Boilerplate has a nice pre-made code for console problems fixing:

// Avoid `console` errors in browsers that lack a console.
(function() {
    var method;
    var noop = function () {};
    var methods = [
        'assert', 'clear', 'count', 'debug', 'dir', 'dirxml', 'error',
        'exception', 'group', 'groupCollapsed', 'groupEnd', 'info', 'log',
        'markTimeline', 'profile', 'profileEnd', 'table', 'time', 'timeEnd',
        'timeStamp', 'trace', 'warn'
    ];
    var length = methods.length;
    var console = (window.console = window.console || {});

    while (length--) {
        method = methods[length];

        // Only stub undefined methods.
        if (!console[method]) {
            console[method] = noop;
        }
    }
}());

As @plus- pointed in comments, latest version is available on their GitHub page

2
158

Here's another possible reason besides the console.log issue (at least in IE11):

When the console is not open, IE does pretty aggressive caching, so make sure that any $.ajax calls or XMLHttpRequest calls have caching set to false.

For example:

$.ajax({cache: false, ...})

When the developer console is open, caching is less aggressive. Seems to be a bug (or maybe a feature?)

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  • 10
    This just saved me ;) Thanks! I'd say it's a bug since you should have the same conditions to test and debug your website with the console open and close.
    – Chnoch
    Mar 6, 2015 at 11:35
  • 1
    Worked for me. Specifically: stackoverflow.com/questions/13391563/… Nov 16, 2016 at 22:51
  • 3
    this should be higher as I think is the actual answer... the accepted answer in regards to console.log in some IE version will throw an error, not caused the behavior described here.
    – Migs
    Aug 23, 2017 at 15:50
66

This solved my problem after I made a minor change to it. I added the following in my html page in order to fix the IE9 problem:

<script type="text/javascript">
    // IE9 fix
    if(!window.console) {
        var console = {
            log : function(){},
            warn : function(){},
            error : function(){},
            time : function(){},
            timeEnd : function(){}
        }
    }
</script>
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  • 2
    This solution does not work on IE 11 on Windows 7 64-bit.
    – Vikram
    Aug 18, 2017 at 8:51
  • 2
    This solved my problem on IE 11 on Windows 7 64-bit.
    – zonyang
    Apr 19, 2019 at 19:31
31

Besides the 'console' usage issue mentioned in accepted answer and others,there is at least another reason why sometimes pages in Internet Explorer work only with the developer tools activated.

When Developer Tools is enabled, IE doesn't really uses its HTTP cache (at least by default in IE 11) like it does in normal mode.

It means if your site or page has a caching problem (if it caches more than it should for example - that was my case), you will not see that problem in F12 mode. So if the javascript does some cached AJAX requests, they may not work as expected in normal mode, and work fine in F12 mode.

2
  • 2
    See stackoverflow.com/questions/3984961/… for how to disable caching xmlHttpReq requests. Jun 16, 2014 at 20:55
  • 3
    Sweet. This surprisingly worked. I guess Angular's $http service does not cache bust as I thought it would.
    – user499054
    Jun 19, 2014 at 16:01
18

I guess this could help, adding this before any tag of javascript:

try{
  console
}catch(e){
   console={}; console.log = function(){};
}
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  • 12
    try catch to detect that a variable exists is a bad idea. Not only is it slow, but if you have more than one statement in your try block, you could get an exception for a different reason. Don't use this, at the very least use if (typeof console == 'undefined') May 15, 2014 at 22:23
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If you are using AngularJS version 1.X you could use the $log service instead of using console.log directly.

Simple service for logging. Default implementation safely writes the message into the browser's console (if present).

https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$log

So if you have something similar to

angular.module('logExample', [])
  .controller('LogController', ['$scope', function($scope) {
    console.log('Hello World!');
 }]);

you can replace it with

angular.module('logExample', [])
  .controller('LogController', ['$scope', '$log', function($scope, $log) {
    $log.log('Hello World!');
 }]);

Angular 2+ does not have any built-in log service.

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  • 1
    this helped me, thanks- for anyone else using typescript, this is the "ILogService" in the angular definitions Jun 7, 2016 at 16:14
  • IIRC using $log causes the location of the log statement to be obscured, unlike when using console.log. Not so great from my experience during development.
    – JesseDahl
    Mar 6, 2018 at 20:33
7

If you are using angular and ie 9, 10 or edge use :

myModule.config(['$httpProvider', function($httpProvider) {
    //initialize get if not there
    if (!$httpProvider.defaults.headers.get) {
        $httpProvider.defaults.headers.get = {};    
    }    

    // Answer edited to include suggestions from comments
    // because previous version of code introduced browser-related errors

    //disable IE ajax request caching
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.get['If-Modified-Since'] = 'Mon, 26 Jul 1997 05:00:00 GMT';
    // extra
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.get['Cache-Control'] = 'no-cache';
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.get['Pragma'] = 'no-cache';
}]);

To completely disable cache.

5

It happened in IE 11 for me. And I was calling the jquery .load function. So I did it the old fashion way and put something in the url to disable cacheing.

$("#divToReplaceHtml").load('@Url.Action("Action", "Controller")/' + @Model.ID + "?nocache=" + new Date().getTime());
4

I got yet another alternative for the solutions offered by runeks and todotresde that also avoids the pitfalls discussed in the comments to Spudley's answer:

        try {
            console.log(message);
        } catch (e) {
        }

It's a bit scruffy but on the other hand it's concise and covers all the logging methods covered in runeks' answer and it has the huge advantage that you can open the console window of IE at any time and the logs come flowing in.

2

We ran into this problem on IE 11 on Windows 7 and Windows 10. We discovered what exactly the problem was by turning on debugging capabilities for IE (IE > Internet Options > Advanced tab > Browsing > Uncheck Disable script debugging (Internet Explorer)). This feature is typically checked on within our environment by the domain admins.

The problem was because we were using the console.debug(...) method within our JavaScript code. The assumption made by the developer (me) was I did not want anything written if the client Developer Tools console was not explicitly open. While Chrome and Firefox seemed to agree with this strategy, IE 11 did not like it one bit. By changing all the console.debug(...) statements to console.log(...) statements, we were able to continue to log additional information in the client console and view it when it was open, but otherwise keep it hidden from the typical user.

2

I put the resolution and fix for my issue . Looks like AJAX request that I put inside my JavaScript was not processing because my page was having some cache problem. if your site or page has a caching problem you will not see that problem in developers/F12 mode. my cached JavaScript AJAX requests it may not work as expected and cause the execution to break which F12 has no problem at all. So just added new parameter to make cache false.

$.ajax({
  cache: false,
});

Looks like IE specifically needs this to be false so that the AJAX and javascript activity run well.

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