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$(window).blur event affecting Iframe

I want to detect when the user leaves my page( e.g open a new tab) so I can stop a countdown. I did it using:

$(window).blur(function() {
 //stop countdown
});

But I have an Iframe inside my page and the countdown also stops when the user clicks on it, but I don't want the above event to execute when someone clicks on the Iframe.

Any idea?

Update, I'm trying a bit more, based on this answer Click-event on iframe?:

iframeDoc = $('iframe').contents().get(0);
$(iframeDoc).click(function(){
   //maybe remove blur event?
});

Update: Tim B solution worked:

$(window).blur(function () {
// check focus
if ($('iframe').is(':focus')) {
    // dont stop countdown
}
else {
    // stop countdown
}                
});

Now I have to remove focus from the Iframe every time the blur event is called, otherwise the countdown will not stop if the user changes tab after focusing the Iframe. I tried like this using the above condition:

if ($('iframe').is(':focus')) {
    // dont stop countdown
    $("iframe").blur()
    $(window).focus();
}

But it did not work. Any idea?

like image 367
Jirico Avatar asked Apr 16 '13 12:04

Jirico


1 Answers

One solution would be to check if the iframe has the focus and then not stop the timer. e.g.

$(window).blur(function () {
    // check focus
    if ($('iframe').is(':focus')) {
        // dont stop countdown
    }
    else {
        // stop countdown
    }                
});

Now this would work, however if your iframe has the focus when the user changes tab, the countdown would not stop. So in this situation you would need to think of an elegant solution to move focus away from the iframe prior. For instance, if a user clicks within the iframe, immanently move focus back to the parent window.

Edit - Updated answer to include extra iframe functionality

Ok so I have been playing about with this. Now I don't know what content you have within your iframe, but you can add some code to this which basically sends the focus back to an object within the parent window when clicked on. e.g.

In your iFrame

<script>
    $(function () {
        $(document).click(function () {
            // call parent function to set focus
            parent.setFocus();
        });
    });
</script>

In your main page

<script>

    function setFocus() {
        // focus on an element on your page.
        $('an-element-on-your-page').focus();
    }

    $(function () {

        $(window).focus(function (e) {
            // bind the blur event
            setBindingEvent();
        });

        var setBindingEvent = function () {
            // unbind
            $(window).unbind('blur');
            $(window).blur(function () {
                // check focus
                if ($('iframe').is(':focus')) {
                    // unbind the blur event
                    $(window).unbind('blur');
                }  
                else {
                    // stop countdown
                }                
            });
        };

        setBindingEvent();

    });
</script>

This will allow you to click on the iframe, set focus back to the main page, and then stop the countdown.

like image 87
Tim B James Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 06:10

Tim B James