With tabbed browsing, there is a reasonable chance that any given webpage is in the background and thus not visible to the user. The Page Visibility API provides events you can watch for to know when a document becomes visible or hidden, as well as features to look at the current visibility state of the page.
Notes: The Page Visibility API is especially useful for saving resources and improving performance by letting a page avoid performing unnecessary tasks when the document isn't visible.
When the user minimizes the window or switches to another tab, the API sends a visibilitychange
event to let listeners know the state of the page has changed. You can detect the event and perform some actions or behave differently. For example, if your web app is playing a video, it can pause the video when the user puts the tab into the background, and resume playback when the user returns to the tab. The user doesn't lose their place in the video, the video's soundtrack doesn't interfere with audio in the new foreground tab, and the user doesn't miss any of the video in the meantime.
Visibility states of an <iframe>
are the same as the parent document. Hiding an <iframe>
using CSS properties (such as display: none;
) doesn't trigger visibility events or change the state of the document contained within the frame.
Let's consider a few use cases for the Page Visibility API.
Developers have historically used imperfect proxies to detect this. For example, watching for blur
and focus
events on the window helps you know when your page is not the active page, but it does not tell you that your page is actually hidden to the user. The Page Visibility API addresses this.
Note: While onblur
and onfocus
will tell you if the user switches windows, it doesn't necessarily mean it's hidden. Pages only become hidden when the user switches tabs or minimizes the browser window containing the tab.
Separately from the Page Visibility API, user agents typically have a number of policies in place to mitigate the performance impact of background or hidden tabs. These may include:
requestAnimationFrame()
callbacks to background tabs or hidden <iframe>
s in order to improve performance and battery life.setTimeout()
are throttled in background/inactive tabs to help improve performance. See Reasons for delays longer than specified for more details.Some processes are exempt from this throttling behavior. In these cases, you can use the Page Visibility API to reduce the tabs' performance impact while they're hidden.
View live example (video with sound).
The example, which pauses the video when you switch to another tab and plays again when you return to its tab, was created with the following code:
// Set the name of the hidden property and the change event for visibility var hidden, visibilityChange; if (typeof document.hidden !== "undefined") { // Opera 12.10 and Firefox 18 and later support hidden = "hidden"; visibilityChange = "visibilitychange"; } else if (typeof document.msHidden !== "undefined") { hidden = "msHidden"; visibilityChange = "msvisibilitychange"; } else if (typeof document.webkitHidden !== "undefined") { hidden = "webkitHidden"; visibilityChange = "webkitvisibilitychange"; } var videoElement = document.getElementById("videoElement"); // If the page is hidden, pause the video; // if the page is shown, play the video function handleVisibilityChange() { if (document[hidden]) { videoElement.pause(); } else { videoElement.play(); } } // Warn if the browser doesn't support addEventListener or the Page Visibility API if (typeof document.addEventListener === "undefined" || hidden === undefined) { console.log("This demo requires a browser, such as Google Chrome or Firefox, that supports the Page Visibility API."); } else { // Handle page visibility change document.addEventListener(visibilityChange, handleVisibilityChange, false); // When the video pauses, set the title. // This shows the paused videoElement.addEventListener("pause", function(){ document.title = 'Paused'; }, false); // When the video plays, set the title. videoElement.addEventListener("play", function(){ document.title = 'Playing'; }, false); }
The Page Visibility API adds the following properties to the Document
interface:
Document.hidden
Read only
true
if the page is in a state considered to be hidden to the user, and false
otherwise.Document.visibilityState
Read only
DOMString
indicating the document's current visibility state. Possible values are: visible
hidden
prerender
prerender
state, but will never switch to this state from any other state, since a document can only prerender once. unloaded
unloaded
value.Document.onvisibilitychange
EventListener
providing the code to be called when the visibilitychange
event is fired.//startSimulation and pauseSimulation defined elsewhere function handleVisibilityChange() { if (document.hidden) { pauseSimulation(); } else { startSimulation(); } } document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", handleVisibilityChange, false);
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
Page Visibility (Second Edition) | Recommendation | Initial definition. |
Document.visibilityState
Desktop | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | |
Basic support | 33
|
? | 18
|
10 | 12.1
|
7 |
prerender value
|
Yes | ? | 49 | ? | ? | ? |
Mobile | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Android webview | Chrome for Android | Edge Mobile | Firefox for Android | Opera for Android | iOS Safari | Samsung Internet | |
Basic support | 4.4.3 | 33 | ? | 18
|
12.1
|
7 | ? |
prerender value
|
Yes | Yes | ? | 49 | ? | ? | ? |
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Page_Visibility_API