if you want the entire page fullscreen the solution is to send "document.body" for IE11 and "document.documentElement" for Chrome and Firefox. function example:
function goFullScreen(element) {
if (element.requestFullscreen) {
element.requestFullscreen();
}
else if (element.msRequestFullscreen) {
if (element === document.documentElement) { //check element
element = document.body; //overwrite the element (for IE)
}
element.msRequestFullscreen();
}
else if (element.mozRequestFullScreen) {
element.mozRequestFullScreen();
}
else if (element.webkitRequestFullScreen) {
element.webkitRequestFullScreen();
}
else {
return; //if none are supported do not show message
}
//show user message (or something else)
}
var entire_page = document.documentElement; //entire page (for Chrome/FF)
goFullScreen(entire_page);
and apply this css, because elements scroll (except root) is disabled in fullscreen by default (this is the standard)
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779286#c8
body {
overflow: auto;
}
or a more readable version "body:-ms-fullscreen { overflow: auto;}"
Tested on IE11, Firefox 49, Chrome 56 and Chrome Android. I did not tested this code on Edge.
P.S. some additional style fixing for IE11 and Chrome
In Chrome if you don't have the body white background color some white bars will appear on the margins of the page. to fix this use:
:-webkit-full-screen {
background-color: somecolor; /* same color as body */
}
In IE11 if you have some elements floating absolute/fixed positioned to the right side of the screen (example ".right_menu {position: fixed; right: 0;}") then are overlayed over the scrollbar. to fix this you can use:
:-ms-fullscreen .right_menu {
margin-right: 17px; /* width of IE scrollbar */
}
more about how to style fullscreen: https://davidwalsh.name/fullscreen
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