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This specification defines a means to programmatically determine the visibility state of a document. This can aid in the development of power and CPU efficient web applications.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.
This specification is ready for wide review.
Pave Visility Level 2 replaces the first version of [PAGE-VISIBILITY] and includes:
VisibilityState.unloaded
has been removed.Document.hidden
is historical. Use Document.visibilityState
instead.Document.onvisibilitychange
has been added.hidden
when the user agent is unloading a document;This document was published by the Web Performance Working Group as a Working Draft. This document is intended to become a W3C Recommendation. If you wish to make comments regarding this document, please send them to public-web-perf@w3.org (subscribe, archives). All comments are welcome.
Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.
This document is governed by the 1 September 2015 W3C Process Document.
This section is non-normative.
The Page Visibility API defines a means to programmatically determine the visibility state of a top level browsing context, and to be notified if the visibility state changes. Without knowing the visibility state of a page, web developers have been designing web pages as if they are always
visible
. This not only results in higher machine resource utilization, but it prevents web developers from making runtime decisions based on whether the web page is visible
to the user. Designing web pages with knowledge of the page's visibility
state can result in improved user experiences and power efficient sites.
With this API, web applications can choose to alter their behavior based on whether they are visible
to the user or not. For example, this API can be used to scale back work when the page is no longer visible
.
As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.
The key words MAY and MUST are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
This section is non-normative.
To improve the user experience and optimize CPU and power efficiency the application could autoplay a video when the application is
visible
, and automatically pause the playback when the application is hidden
:
var videoElement = document.getElementById("videoElement");
// pause video buffering if page is being prerendered
if (document.visibilityState == "prerender") {
// ...
}
// Autoplay the video if application is visible
if (document.visibilityState == "visible") {
videoElement.play();
}
// Handle page visibility change events
function handleVisibilityChange() {
if (document.visibilityState == "hidden") {
videoElement.pause();
} else {
videoElement.play();
}
}
document.addEventListener('visibilitychange', handleVisibilityChange, false);
Similar logic can be applied to intellegently pause and resume, or throttle, execution of application code such as animation loops, analytics, and other types of processing. By combining the
visibilityState
attribute of the Document
interface and the visibilitychange
event, the application is able to both query and listen to page visibility events to deliver a better user experience, as well as improve efficiency and performance of its execution.
VisibilityState
enum
The Document
of the top level browsing context can be in one of the following visibility
states:
hidden
Document
is not visible
at all on any screen.
visible
Document
is at least partially visible on at least one screen. This is the same condition under which the
hidden
attribute is set to false
.
prerender
Document
is loaded in the prerender mode and is not yet visible.
The visibility states are reflected in the API via the
VisibilityState
enum.
enum VisibilityState
{
"hidden",
"visible",
"prerender"
};
Document
interface
This specification extends the [HTML51] Document
interface:
partial interface Document
{
readonly attribute VisibilityState
visibilityState;
attribute EventHandler onvisibilitychange
;
};
visibilityState
attribute
On getting, the visibilityState
attribute the user agent
MUST run the steps to determine the visibility state:
Document
of the top
level browsing context.
defaultView
of doc is
null
, return hidden
.
VisibilityState
value that best matches the visibility state of doc:
To accommodate assistive technologies that are typically full screen but still show a view of the page, when applicable, on getting, the
visibilityState
attribute MAY return
visible
, instead of hidden
, when the user agent is not minimized but is fully obscured by other applications.
onvisiblitychange
event handler
onvisibilitychange
is an
event handler IDL attribute for the visibilitychange event type.
The task source for these tasks is the user interaction task source.
When the user agent determines that the visibility of the
Document
of the top level browsing context has changed, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Document
of the top level
browsing context.
visible
:
pageshow
event.
visible
, or if the user agent is to unload doc:
Document
, run the now hidden algorithm during the unloading document
visibility change steps.
The now visible algorithm runs the following steps synchronously:
Document
of the top level
browsing context.
visibilitychange
that bubbles, isn't cancelable, and has no default action, at the
doc.
The now hidden algorithm runs the following steps synchronously:
Document
of the top level
browsing context.
visibilitychange
that bubbles, isn't cancelable, and has no default action, at the
doc.
The Page Visibility API enables third party content on a web page to determine the visibility of the Document
contained by the top level browsing context with higher precision compared to existing mechanisms, like focus or blur events. However, for practical considerations, the additional exposure is not substantial.
The following concepts and interfaces are defined in the [HTML51] specification:
defaultView
pageshow
Document
blur
focus
The [DOM4] specification defines how to fire a simple event.
Thanks to Alex Komoroske, Arvind Jain, Boris Zbarsky, Cameron McCormack, James Robinson, Jason Weber, Jonas Sicking, Karen Anderson, Kyle Simpson, Nat Duca, Nic Jansma, Philippe Le Hegaret, and Todd Reifsteck for their contributions to this work.