8

as the title reads, I'd like to know what is the most reliable way to trigger an event when the Browser(s) enters/leaves in/out the fullscreen mode.

note : I'm not asking how to fullscreen the current page, I just want to know whether or not there is a way to queue some tasks if the user, for example, press F11 or any other related fullscreen-entering keys.

6 Answers 6

9

screen.width and screen.height tell you the user's screen resolution, so try this:

var fullscreen;
function onfullscreenchange(full) {
    ...
}

// You might want to use addEventListener and its equivalents instead
window.onresize = function () {
    if (window.outerWidth === screen.width && window.outerHeight === screen.height) {
        if (!fullscreen) {
            fullscreen = true;
            onfullscreenchange(true);
        }
    } else {
        if (fullscreen) {
            fullscreen = false;
            onfullscreenchange(false);
    }
};

I'm aware this isn't the cleanest or most robust way of doing all this, but hopefully it gives you an idea. Notably, IE<9 needs a different approach for determining the window size, so I'll leave you to look that up.

8
  • +1 Thats what i was thinking about ... was just going to put some code together ...like you say not 100% reliable but a great starting point ...
    – Manse
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:14
  • Also, this will fail if the user has multiple monitors... and there's no way of detecting this reliably
    – Nathan
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:16
  • thanks, however I encounter some troubles with the resizing event in Firefox, that is why I never use it, too bad it looks great. I finally use John Resig's addEvent function and look up the keyCode when the user press a key on his keyboard.
    – vdegenne
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:25
  • @Oddant what happens if the user uses the mouse to trigger full screen ?
    – Manse
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:30
  • @ManseUK yes that's true but I assume more than 90% of them will trigger the key (I display a message on the page leading them to press F11)
    – vdegenne
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:33
9

I was working with this event when I stumble with this question, I want to share what I learn about it even though it won't solve this question. The onfullscreenchange event is now supported with prefixes by modern desktop browsers and Chrome for Android, but there are some things to have in mind:

  • This event won't trigger when the window goes fullscreen, I know it sounds weird, but it seems to be intended only for the document and its elements. So if an element of a document goes fullscreen the event will trigger, but when a keyboard shortcut is used to make your browser fullscreen it won't.

  • In Chrome and Safari a function can subscribe to this event either by defining the document method document.onwebkitfullscreenchange = myFunc; or by defining the element method myElem.onwebkitfullscreenchange = myFunc;, also you can use addEventListener myElem.addEventListener("webkitfullscreenchange", myFunc);. In IE and Firefox the event will work only if the method is defined in the document and using addEventListener won't trigger the event.

Here's a Codepen Demo of this event, more info in MDN Using fullscreen mode.


Update. From MDN web docs:

For the moment not all browsers are implementing the unprefixed version of the API (for vendor agnostic access to the Fullscreen API you can use Fscreen).

3
  • The Codepen Demo helped me out. It's a shame so much work is needed to get to this trivial event.
    – marijnz0r
    Nov 21, 2017 at 10:47
  • At the time of this writing, on Safari desktop v13.1, the fullscreenchangeevent is still not supported (tested on the full screen element and the document element), nor the onfullscreenchange listener: you need to set the onwebkitfullscreenchange listener or listen to the webkitfullscreenchange event. Jan 10, 2020 at 12:05
  • And as far as Edge is concerned, the onwebkitfullscreenchange listener should be used, and regarding Internet Explorer v10 and v11, the onmsfullscreenchange listener. Jan 10, 2020 at 20:24
6

A slightly other approach using a media query and a fallback to the window.document.fullscreenElement.

This works on Chrome whether it's a click/touch event or the F11 key being pressed.

function fullscreenEvent(fullscreen) {
    ...
}

window.onresize = function () {
    if (window.matchMedia('(display-mode: fullscreen)').matches ||
    window.document.fullscreenElement) {
       fullscreenEvent(true);
    } else {
       fullscreenEvent(false);
    }
}
2
  • 1
    Works perfectly for me. Oct 24, 2019 at 9:52
  • 1
    Even works in Angular (14) : install the event handler in the constructor (so it is only installed once) and create a function isFullScreen returning the boolean expression in if statement. THen in your HTML-template use e.g. *ngIf="isFullScreen()" to toggle icons.
    – Pianoman
    Dec 9, 2023 at 19:32
1

There is a plugin available for jQuery ( i know your not using jQuery ) ..... what it does is listen to the keys pressed on the window - so it listens for F11 being pressed etc ... Not the greatest solution but one that might work

Short of that I think you are stumped ...

A thought ...

I just stumbled across this page -> http://www.javascriptkit.com/howto/newtech3.shtml

JavaScript can detect the size of the screen using screen.width / screen.height ... perhaps use the resize event to see if the browser matches the screen size ie fullscreen ?

@Nathans answer is exactly what i was talking about ...

2
  • thanks mister, you're right I'm not using jQuery :) I prefer the addEvent function which is light and consistent in modern browsers, anyway as a matter of fact , 'keyup' on the window element in IE doesn't seem to be recognized, any idea ?
    – vdegenne
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:36
  • @Oddant 'keyup' = when the key is released
    – Manse
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:37
0

There is a proposed Fullscreen API for Javascript, which would allow you to hook into the onfullscreenchange event.

However, I 'm not very optimistic with regards to browser support at this point in time.

1
  • thanks I already saw that though, but it's not available yet.
    – vdegenne
    Dec 2, 2011 at 15:04
0

how about using this jQuery plugin

yes, I know there might be an pure js way, but this is very easy.

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