Did you know? DZone has great portals for Python, Cloud, NoSQL, and HTML5!
HTML5 Zone is brought to you in partnership with:

My name is Sagar Ganatra and I'm from Bangalore, India. I'm currently employed with Adobe India and I work there as a ColdFusion Engineer. At Adobe, I have worked on various features of ColdFusion and ColdFusion Builder. I'm very much passionate of web technologies and have a very good understanding of jQuery, Flex, HTML5, Java and of course ColdFusion. Sagar H is a DZone MVB and is not an employee of DZone and has posted 28 posts at DZone. You can read more from them at their website. View Full User Profile

Using HTML5's PageVisibility API

12.08.2011
Email
Views: 2289
  • submit to reddit
The HTML5 Microzone is presented by DZone and Microsoft to bring you the most interesting and relevant content on emerging web standards.  Experience all that the HTML5 Microzone has to offer on our homepage and check out the cutting edge web development tutorials on Script Junkie, Build My Pinned Site, and the HTML5 DevCenter.

Recently I stumbled upon the PageVisibility API introduced in HTML5, which gives developers an opportunity to improve the performance of a web page and to better the user experience. Whenever a user opens a new tab or navigates to another tab, the behavior of the current page from which user navigated can be controlled using this API. Consider a webmail client that is trying to look for new mails every two seconds, if a user opens a new tab or minimizes the browser window then retrieving mails every two seconds would expend resources, whilst the user is not actively viewing the page. Here the PageVisibilty API would come handy and would allow developers to alter the behavior of the web page.

The specification introduces the interface - DocumentVisibility. It includes the attributes 'hidden' and 'visibilityState'. The hidden attribute of the document object (document.hidden) returns true if the user selects another tab or when the browser window is minimized. It returns false when the same document is selected by the user. The visibilityState attribute is used to indicate the state of the page - hidden, visible and preview (marked as optional in the spec).

To be notified when the document becomes hidden or when it becomes visible again one can listen to the 'visibilitychange' event. The example below calculates the number of seconds the user was not active on the page:

 <!DOCTYPE HTML>  
 <html>  
 <head>  
      <script type="text/javascript">  
           timer = 0;  
           function onLoad(){  
                document.addEventListener("visibilitychange",stateChanged);  
                document.addEventListener("webkitvisibilitychange", stateChanged);  
                document.addEventListener("msvisibilitychange", stateChanged);  
           }  
           function stateChanged(){  
                console.log(document.webkitVisibilityState);  
                if(document.hidden || document.webkitHidden || document.msHidden){  
                     //new tab or window minimized
                     timer = new Date().getTime();  
                }  
                else {  
                     alert('You were away for ' + (new Date().getTime()-timer)/1000+ ' seconds.')  
                }  
           }  
      </script>  
 </head>  
 <body onLoad="onLoad()">  
 </body>  
 </html>

Browser support:

Chrome and IE-10 (surprisingly) have implemented this specification. However, as observed in the above code, they have provided their own prefixes to the attributes and the event listener. On Chrome, the attributes are named webkitHidden and webkitVisibilityState. On IE, it is msHidden and msVisibilityState. Similarly the event is named webkitvisibilitychange and msvisibilitychange.

Uses:

The PageVisiblity API can be used to notify the page when the user is not interacting with it. On receiving this notification, the client can stop polling for new data. Also, when the user selects the page, a notification can be sent to indicate that the user is active and new data can be fetched from the server. This API would also come handy where the web page is rendering some animation effects. It would make sense to stop the animation when the user is not viewing the page. When the user selects the page, a welcome back message can be displayed and the animation effect can be started.

 

Source: http://www.sagarganatra.com/2011/11/using-html5s-pagevisibility-api.html

Published at DZone with permission of Sagar H Ganatra, author and DZone MVB.

(Note: Opinions expressed in this article and its replies are the opinions of their respective authors and not those of DZone, Inc.)

HTML5 is the most dramatic step in the evolution of web standards. It incorporates features such as geolocation, video playback and drag-and-drop. HTML5 allows developers to create rich internet applications without the need for third party APIs and browser plug-ins.  Under the banner of HTML5, modern web standards such as CSS3, SVG, XHR2, WebSockets, IndexedDB, and AppCache are pushing the boundaries for what a browser can achieve using web standards.  This Microzone is supported by Microsoft, and it will delve into the intricacies of using these new web technologies and teach you how to make your websites compatible with all of the modern browsers.

Comments

Sandeep Bhandari replied on Fri, 2011/12/09 - 8:54am

I liked the feature but hated the approach taken by different browsers to implement this feature by rolling out their own tags than to reach a common ground for the tag to use.HTML5 Features and Going Forward

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.