I've been using W3Schools' Javascript library to handle HTML includes onto other HTML pages. Everything has been going good, except I'm running into some formatting issues. When the include processes, it puts the HTML into the body tag when I'd prefer it into a different tag. I don't want my body tag formatting to impact the HTML content that's imported. I'm open to any solutions, but I'd prefer something that allows me to specify a specific tag in the HTML document to be imported into.
I've tried putting the Javascript call into the head or outside of the body tag but haven't had any luck.
Here's the code used by W3Schools: https://www.w3schools.com/howto/howto_html_include.asp
<script src="https://www.w3schools.com/lib/w3.js"></script>
<!-- import header -->
<div w3-include-HTML="./includes/header.html"></div>
<!-- import navigation bar -->
<div w3-include-HTML="./includes/navbar.html"></div>
<!-- Script to Handle W3Schools HTML Includes -->
<script>
w3.includeHTML();
</script>
Thanks for the help! I'm hoping there's a good way to do this, otherwise I guess I can format my text outside of the body tag... That's far from ideal though.
Did you try to replace <script> w3.includeHTML(); </script> by <script>includeHTML(); </script> ?
I've recently started using the <template> tag for HTML that I process afterwards using a template library, e.g.
<template id="tmpl">
<div class="something">
{{title}}
</div>
</template>
...
<script>
var output = Mustache.render($('#tmpl').html(), {
link: 'abc',
title: 'abc'
});
</script>
However, I've come to realise this means I have a broken link (example.com/pages/{{link}}) in my HTML. This is a concern, as various crawlers might consider it invalid (in fact, the Google Search Console reports my homepage as having a broken link).
Is it valid to use <template> this way?
Is it better to put it in something like <script type="text/template"> instead (as seen on the handlebars.js website)?
The output variable does contain the HTML we would expect, i.e., the rendered template; however, your code does not write the contents of the output variable anywhere.
Here is a working example:
<template id="tmpl">
<div class="something">
{{title}}
</div>
</template>
<span id="output"></span>
<script>
var output = Mustache.render($('#tmpl').html(), {
link: 'abc',
title: 'abc'
});
$('#output').html(output);
</script>
Google has not properly crawled the test site I setup for this. However, when I asked GoogleBot to render my version of your code it displayed the link inside the template element, i.e., *{{title}}* and the rendered template link, i.e., *abc*. Even though Google says you have a broken link in the template element, you really don't when a user views it.
One possible way to get Google to quit indicating that you have a broken link is to surround your template tags with <!--googleoff: anchor--> ...templates... <!--googleon: anchor-->. These tags stop googlebot from indexing anchor tags contained within.
Example:
<!--googleoff: anchor-->
<template id="tmpl">
<div class="something">
{{title}}
</div>
</template>
<!--googleon: anchor-->
I am using angularJS with bootstrap.
I have following html code in ResetAndRegisterCommon.html
<div class="error"
ng-show="resetRegisterForm.Email.$invalid&& resetRegisterForm.Email.$dirty">
<span ng-show="resetRegisterForm.Email.$error">
<div class="alert alert-warning">
Warning! Please enter valid email address
</div>
</span>
</div>
I would like to reuse the above code in Mypage1.html and Mypage2.html
I have tried the following code in Mypage1.html and Mypage2.html but the html tag does not render at all in Mypage1.html and Mypage2.html.
<link rel="import" href="ResetAndRegisterCommon.html">
You need JS to access the contents of the imported file. It's actually really easy though.
Let's give your <link> an id so we can call it.
<link rel="import" href="page.html" id="import">
Now we use JS to call it
var doc = document.querySelector('#import').import;
Now we grab the DOM from the document that was imported
var error = doc.querySelector('.error');
Then we clone it and append it to the current page
document.body.appendChild(error.CloneNode(true));
With each new page I have to update the navigation panel. Which means I go from page to page copying and pasting my navigation bar. The more pages I add the harder it gets. Now I have in-consistent navigation bars. So what I'm looking for is a way to make an html file that contains only the navigation bar, then embed it into my code, like I'd do with CSS and JavaScript. That way if I edit the one file all other pages get updated. If I use the iframe tag there would be way to many problems, but I know of no other tag that can do what I need. So what should I do? I've done some research but all I can find is the iframe tag.. What should I do?
If your page is strictly HTML+JavaScript, you can use HTML DOM innerHTML Property.
Here is an example:
index.html
<body>
<nav id="navMenu"></nav>
<div> rest of web page body here </div>
<script src="script.js"></script>
</body>
about.html
<body>
<nav id="navMenu"></nav>
<div> rest of web page body here </div>
<script src="script.js"></script>
</body>
script.js
document.getElementById("navMenu").innerHTML =
'<ul>'+
'<li>Home</li>'+
'<li>Services</li>'+
'<li>About</li>'+
'</ul>';
Important line here is nav tag, and all you need to do is to add this line in other pages in this example about.html.
I also recommend PHP or similar to accomplish what you need!
If your page is strictly HTML then you will just have to do copy and paste. It would have been a lot better if you were using may be PHP then you can simply do an include or require but as the situation is now, all you need is to do a clean HTML coding for your navigation. Indent your codes well then it will be easier for you to copy and page across all pages.
If you can use simple PHP codes then read this: http://www.w3schools.com/php/php_includes.asp
I'd strongly recommend using PHP:
<?php include "header.html"; ?>
However, if that is not an option, you can use Server Side Includes:
File in the same dir:
<!--#include file="header.html"-->
File in a different dir:
<!--#include virtual="/header.html"-->
You'll need a Linux/Apache (not Windows) server for this to work. You'll also need to use the .shtml file extension.
Alternatively, given that you want to keep .html extensions, you can make Apache "think" that all .html files are actually .php:
Create a .htaccess file at the root of your website and add this line:
AddType application/x-httpd-php .html .htm
If your are running PHP as CGI (probably not the case), you should write instead:
AddHandler application/x-httpd-php .html .htm
(Taken from this answer)
If you would like to use PHP to achieve, this, you can do something similar to the code below. You'll have 2 "template" files, and then however many "content" files you need.
header.php will include content on the header (logo, nav menu, etc)
footer.php will include content on the footer (bottom navigation, copyright, disclaimers, etc.)
content.php will include the actual content you wish to display. You can have an infinite number of "content" pages.
Note that while these files have .php extensions, HTML code still works perfectly fine. So you can do something like this for every content.php:
content.php
<?php include "header.php"; ?>
<div class="content">
Your page content will go here
</div>
<?php include "footer.php"; ?>
header.php
<html>
<body>
<div class="header">
Header content such as nav bar here
</div>
footer.php
<div class="footer">
Footer content such as copyright here
</div>
</body>
</html>
In this way, you can change the contents of header.php and footer.php just once, and the changes will be reflected in all the pages you've included the files in.
If you have any further questions or would like something explained again, feel free to post a comment.
In fact, if you are doing only front-end stuff like I do, using load() with jQuery is more than enough. Just like what Skitty and fskirschbaum said.
But I would like to add a few points,
1. based on #Skitty's comment, it is important to load your navbar.html on the server side, like simply host it on your github.io website and refer to it by its URL like
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#nav-container').load('https://berlinali.github.io/test%20header%20template/header.html #nav');}
2. if you have css file, just put it inside < style >< /style> in the < header > part of your html file.
I push my code on github if you need some reference. Hope it helps!
https://github.com/BerlinaLI/berlinali.github.io/tree/master/test%20header%20template
You can use server side scripting languages like php or ruby. Or you can create some say menu.json file and create menu from that in javascript.
With serverside you should setup server or you can use XAMPP for fast setup.
Create header.html with all your menu links
Inlude menu file by using <?php include 'header.html'; ?> line (all files where you use it should be with .php extension or you can edit php config file for .html extension)
PHP would probably be the best method in this case, but since it sounds like you already have everything set up in pure HTML and JavaScript, you could consider using jQuery to load an external file into the DOM.
jquery.load('header.html')
This, of course has its own set of concerns, but you can effectively control everything from a simple .js framework without having to use php includes and doesn't require an iFrame.
You'd still potentially want to address a fallback for browsers without JavaScript turned on, so I only suggest this without knowing all the details, and I would still suggest that php would still be a better solution since you're allowing the server to do the heavy lifting.
I figured it out myself, you can use a JavaScript file and use document.write then put this where you want it to go:
<script type="text/javascript" src="/js/sidebar.js"/>
Here's my js file:
document.write("<div id='sidebartop'>");
document.write("<p>Navigation</p>");
document.write("</div>");
If you want to use both double quotes and single quotes inside the line, be careful with that, and I think that the < and > signs have to be in double quotes. Here's my full code:
----/js/sidebar.js----
document.write("<div id='sidebartop'>");
document.write("<p>Navigation</p>");
document.write("</div>");
document.write("<div id='sidebar'>");
if (page==1) { var p=" style='text-decoration: underline;'" } else { var p=" style='text-decoration: normal;'" }
if (page==2) { var pp=" style='text-decoration: underline;'" } else { var pp=" style='text-decoration: normal;'" }
if (page==3) { var ppp=" style='text-decoration: underline;'" } else { var ppp=" style='text-decoration: normal;'" }
if (page==4) { var pppp=" style='text-decoration: underline;'" } else { var pppp=" style='text-decoration: normal;'" }
if (page==5) { var ppppp=" style='text-decoration: underline;'" } else { var ppppp=" style='text-decoration: normal;'" }
document.write("<p><"+'a href="http://brandonc.handcraft.com/"'+p+">Home</a></p>");
document.write("<p><"+'a href="http://brandonc.handcraft.com/about"'+pp+">About The Author</a></p>");
document.write("<p><"+'a href="http://brandonc.handcraft.com/sevenmages"'+ppp+">The Seven Mages</a></p>");
document.write("<p><"+'a href="http://brandonc.handcraft.com/comment"'+pppp+">Leave A Comment</a></p>");
document.write("<p><"+'a href="http://brandonc.handcraft.com/calender"'+ppppp+">Calender</a></p>");
document.write("</div>");
----In place where you want code to go----
<script>var page=5</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="/js/sidebar.js"/>
Probably not the most efficient, and I'd defiantly recommend using PHP like in the other answers, but this works for me and doesn't need a .php after every url.
Simply use jQuery .load(). It is very easy to use. Here's an example
navbar.html
<div>This is the navigation bar</div>
index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Home Page</title>
</head>
<body>
<!--HEADER-->
<div id="nav-container"></div>
<!--HEADER-->
<p>This is the homepage.</p>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#nav-container').load('header.html');
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
about.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>About Page</title>
</head>
<body>
<!--HEADER-->
<div id="nav-container"></div>
<!--HEADER-->
<p>This is the about page.</p>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#nav-container').load('header.html');
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
i am a beginner in html. i would like to do something like this,I am using the below code to create tabs, now i have the contents of the section in a different html file. Please tell me how to load that html file inside the section.
<html>
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="tabs.css">
<body>
<article class="tabs">
<section id="tab1">
<h2>NewRecord</h2>
<p>This content appears on tab 1.</p>
</section>
</article>
</body>
</head>
</html>
Option 1
Use iframes to archive this. It will display another page.
Option 2
Use Ajax Example
HTML is the structure, CSS is the style (appearance), and JavaScript is the behavior. You can't load data with just structure alone, you'll need to introduce some scripts in there. jQuery is a common library that's fairly easy to learn, but there's many available.
You can load the content from another HTML file via jQuery '.load()' method.
Step 1 - Include jQuery in your code.
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.3/jquery.min.js"></script>
Step 2 - Add this code before the closing </body> tag.
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#tab1').load('html-file-1.html');
});
</script>
Step 3 - Your external html file html-file-1.html contains nothing but simple html tags to represent the content you want to load within the section.