CSS Independent Content: Difference between revisions

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If you have ever tried appending some neat HTML user interface to web pages with a script set to run on not just one site, but perhaps anywhere (a button that invokes some feature in your script, perhaps), after using it some time, you will probably have noticed that it doesn't look the same way everywhere. This is because the CSS rules of the page author's apply to your interface HTML too, overriding the default CSS rules (there are dozens of CSS rules, all of which may be overridden for every single tag you add).
Any HTML you inject into a site is subject to the CSS rules of that site.
This is often what you want: the elements you inject will fit in nicely.
But if you inject something – perhaps a configuration panel – that should look the same in pages where styles can vary wildly (e.g. MySpace, eBay) or across multiple sites (e.g. @include *), you may find that you want it exempt from the site CSS.


One solution: do your stugg in an iframes; sketchy code example:
The solution is to add your panel inside an iframe.
Example code:


  function tag( name, attr ) {
<pre class='sample'>
    var node = doc.createElement( name );
// position:fixed means stay fixed even when the page scrolls. z-index keeps your iframe on top.
    attr = attr || {};
// The remainder of the line smacks the panel into the bottom left corner, out of your way.
    for( var i in attr )
// Overflow (in combination with the setTimeout) ensures the iframe fits your entire panel.
      node.setAttribute( i, attr[i] );
var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; bottom:0px; left:0px; border:0; margin:0; padding:0; ' +
    return node;
          'overflow:hidden;'
  }


  var css = "opacity:0.95; position:fixed; left:0; bottom:0; border:0; " +
var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
    "margin:0; padding:0; overflowY:auto; overflowX:hidden";
iframe.setAttribute('style', css);


  var doc = document;
// The about:blank page becomes a blank(!) canvas to modify
  var iframe = tag( "iframe", { style:css, src:"about:blank" } );
iframe.src = 'about:blank';
  doc.body.appendChild( iframe );
 
  var win = unsafeWindow.frames[unsafeWindow.frames.length-1];
document.body.appendChild(iframe);
  doc = win.document;
 
  /* add things to doc.body */
// Make sure Firefox initializes the DOM before we try to use it.
  iframe.style.height = (16 + doc.body.offsetHeight) + "px";
iframe.addEventListener("load", function() {
  iframe.style.width = (16 + doc.body.offsetWidth) + "px";
    var doc = iframe.contentDocument;
    doc.body.style.background = 'red';
    doc.body.innerHTML = 'Test.';
    // It seems Firefox (at least 3.6) has a bug. It will report offsetWidth less than clientWidth.
    // So try clientWidth and clientHeight instead of offsetWidth and offsetHeight
    iframe.style.width = doc.body.offsetWidth + "px";
    iframe.style.height = doc.body.offsetHeight + "px";
}, false);
</pre>
 
The above code will result in a minimal panel always-on-top in the bottom left corner, that does not grows to contain its contents because iframe.style.height has fixed value.
For a more intrusive lightbox-style panel mid-screen, just drop the two <code>iframe.style</code> lines and change the CSS to e.g.:
 
<pre class='sample'>
// Margin, top, left, width and height center the iframe horizontally and vertically:
var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; border:1px solid black; ' +
          'top:50%; left:50%; width:30em; margin:-15em 0 0 -10em; height:20em;';
</pre>
 
As Firefox's iframe handling is [https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=295813 rather] [https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=388714 buggy], you may want to spare yourself much pain by @require'ing [http://ecmanaut.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/lib/make-iframe.js this handy library] for roughly the above, and use code like this instead:
 
<pre class='sample'>
makeFrame(gotFrame);
 
function gotFrame(iframe, win, doc) {
  iframe.height = "50";
  iframe.style.position = "fixed";
  iframe.style.bottom = iframe.style.left = "0";
  doc.body.innerHTML = "Hello world!";
}
</pre>
 
[[Category:Coding Tips]]
[[Category:@require Library]]

Latest revision as of 22:21, 14 August 2013

Any HTML you inject into a site is subject to the CSS rules of that site. This is often what you want: the elements you inject will fit in nicely. But if you inject something – perhaps a configuration panel – that should look the same in pages where styles can vary wildly (e.g. MySpace, eBay) or across multiple sites (e.g. @include *), you may find that you want it exempt from the site CSS.

The solution is to add your panel inside an iframe. Example code:

// position:fixed means stay fixed even when the page scrolls. z-index keeps your iframe on top.
// The remainder of the line smacks the panel into the bottom left corner, out of your way.
// Overflow (in combination with the setTimeout) ensures the iframe fits your entire panel.
var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; bottom:0px; left:0px; border:0; margin:0; padding:0; ' +
          'overflow:hidden;'

var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
iframe.setAttribute('style', css);

// The about:blank page becomes a blank(!) canvas to modify
iframe.src = 'about:blank';

document.body.appendChild(iframe);

// Make sure Firefox initializes the DOM before we try to use it.
iframe.addEventListener("load", function() {
    var doc = iframe.contentDocument;
    doc.body.style.background = 'red';
    doc.body.innerHTML = 'Test.';
    // It seems Firefox (at least 3.6) has a bug. It will report offsetWidth less than clientWidth.
    // So try clientWidth and clientHeight instead of offsetWidth and offsetHeight
    iframe.style.width = doc.body.offsetWidth + "px";
    iframe.style.height = doc.body.offsetHeight + "px";
}, false);

The above code will result in a minimal panel always-on-top in the bottom left corner, that does not grows to contain its contents because iframe.style.height has fixed value. For a more intrusive lightbox-style panel mid-screen, just drop the two iframe.style lines and change the CSS to e.g.:

// Margin, top, left, width and height center the iframe horizontally and vertically:
var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; border:1px solid black; ' +
          'top:50%; left:50%; width:30em; margin:-15em 0 0 -10em; height:20em;';

As Firefox's iframe handling is rather buggy, you may want to spare yourself much pain by @require'ing this handy library for roughly the above, and use code like this instead:

makeFrame(gotFrame);

function gotFrame(iframe, win, doc) {
  iframe.height = "50";
  iframe.style.position = "fixed";
  iframe.style.bottom = iframe.style.left = "0";
  doc.body.innerHTML = "Hello world!";
}