This is the way jQuery wraps the functions you're looking for - the snippet does not need jQuery, and is cross-browser compatible. I've replaced all calls to jQuery.ready() with yourcallback
- which you need to define.
What goes on in here:
- first, the function
DOMContentLoaded
is defined, which will be used when the DOMContentLoaded event fires - it ensures that the callback is only called once.
- a check if the document is already loaded - if yes, fire the callback right away
- otherwise sniff for features (
document.addEventListener
/ document.attachEvent
) and bind the callbacks to it (different for IE and normal browsers, plus the onload callback)
Lifted from jQuery 1.4.3, functions bindReady() and DOMContentLoaded:
/*
* Copyright 2010, John Resig
* Dual licensed under the MIT or GPL Version 2 licenses.
* http://jquery.org/license
*/
// Cleanup functions for the document ready method
// attached in the bindReady handler
if ( document.addEventListener ) {
DOMContentLoaded = function() {
document.removeEventListener( "DOMContentLoaded", DOMContentLoaded, false );
//jQuery.ready();
yourcallback();
};
} else if ( document.attachEvent ) {
DOMContentLoaded = function() {
// Make sure body exists, at least, in case IE gets a little overzealous
if ( document.readyState === "complete" ) {
document.detachEvent( "onreadystatechange", DOMContentLoaded );
//jQuery.ready();
yourcallback();
}
};
}
// Catch cases where $(document).ready() is called after the
// browser event has already occurred.
if ( document.readyState === "complete" ) {
// Handle it asynchronously to allow scripts the opportunity to delay ready
//return setTimeout( jQuery.ready, 1 );
// ^^ you may want to call *your* function here, similarly for the other calls to jQuery.ready
setTimeout( yourcallback, 1 );
}
// Mozilla, Opera and webkit nightlies currently support this event
if ( document.addEventListener ) {
// Use the handy event callback
document.addEventListener( "DOMContentLoaded", DOMContentLoaded, false );
// A fallback to window.onload, that will always work
//window.addEventListener( "load", jQuery.ready, false );
window.addEventListener( "load", yourcallback, false );
// If IE event model is used
} else if ( document.attachEvent ) {
// ensure firing before onload,
// maybe late but safe also for iframes
document.attachEvent("onreadystatechange", DOMContentLoaded);
// A fallback to window.onload, that will always work
window.attachEvent( "onload", yourcallback );
}
That's 51 lines of pure JavaScript code, just to register the event reliably. As far as I know, there is no easier method. Goes to show what the wrappers like jQuery are good for: they wrap the capability sniffing and ugly compatibility issues so that you can focus on something else.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…