Two methods to consider, below: (CSS display or DOM node removal)
1) CSS:
Consider css display controls for various nodes that are conditional on JS.
Onload, JavaScript can change the pertinent elements' display style to "none".
- If there is no JS, then the page elements are not hidden.
In your onload init function, set: elObj.style.display:none;
.
Add noscript links or notice, so that someone who has simply disabled JavaScript can choose to enable it or not, based on what you tell them they are not seeing.
OR
2) Node Extraction:
A second option is to have JavaScript actually remove the redundant nodes onload.
- Bots and Non-JS users will have immediate, non-obtrusive access to the page elements.
- JS users will get the goods delivered by your scripts.
For example, you might have one granddaddy container division to remove, that has a known id, say "nonjs".
A function I use to remove them from memory:
XDOM.deleteNode = function(node) {
if (!node || typeof node != "object") {return;}
var trashcan = XDOM.getElementById('xdomtrashcan');
if (!trashcan) {
trashcan = document.createElement('DIV');
// quick and dirty property set:
trashcan.id = 'xdomtrashcan';
trashcan.style.display = 'none';
document.body.appendChild(trashcan);
}
trashcan.appendChild(node);
trashcan.innerHTML = ""; //empty the trash
};
- (XDOM normalizes browser differences. This code uses XDOM.getElementById. Use your favorite cross-browser function instead.)