elemental.html.ScriptElement Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2012 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
* use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
* the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
package elemental.html;
import elemental.dom.Element;
import elemental.events.*;
import elemental.util.*;
import elemental.dom.*;
import elemental.html.*;
import elemental.css.*;
import elemental.stylesheets.*;
import java.util.Date;
/**
* The script
element is used to embed or reference an executable script within an HTML or XHTML document.
Scripts without async
or defer
attributes are fetched and executed immediately, before the browser continues to parse the page.
*/
public interface ScriptElement extends Element {
/**
* Set this Boolean attribute to indicate that the browser should, if possible, execute the script asynchronously. It has no effect on inline scripts (i.e., scripts that don't have the src attribute). In older browsers that don't support the async attribute, parser-inserted scripts block the parser; script-inserted scripts execute asynchronously in IE and WebKit, but synchronously in Opera and pre-4.0 Firefox. In Firefox 4.0, the async
DOM property defaults to true
for script-created scripts, so the default behavior matches the behavior of IE and WebKit. To request script-inserted external scripts be executed in the insertion order in browsers where the document.createElement("script").async
evaluates to true
(such as Firefox 4.0), set .async=false
on the scripts you want to maintain order. Never call document.write()
from an async
script. In Gecko 1.9.2, calling document.write()
has an unpredictable effect. In Gecko 2.0, calling document.write()
from an async
script has no effect (other than printing a warning to the error console).
*/
boolean isAsync();
void setAsync(boolean arg);
String getCharset();
void setCharset(String arg);
String getCrossOrigin();
void setCrossOrigin(String arg);
/**
* This Boolean attribute is set to indicate to a browser that the script is meant to be executed after the document has been parsed. Since this feature hasn't yet been implemented by all other major browsers, authors should not assume that the script’s execution will actually be deferred. Never call document.write()
from a defer
script (since Gecko 1.9.2, this will blow away the document). The defer
attribute shouldn't be used on scripts that don't have the src
attribute. Since Gecko 1.9.2, the defer
attribute is ignored on scripts that don't have the src
attribute. However, in Gecko 1.9.1 even inline scripts are deferred if the defer
attribute is set.
*/
boolean isDefer();
void setDefer(boolean arg);
String getEvent();
void setEvent(String arg);
String getHtmlFor();
void setHtmlFor(String arg);
/**
* This attribute specifies the URI of an external script; this can be used as an alternative to embedding a script directly within a document. script
elements with an src
attribute specified should not have a script embedded within its tags.
*/
String getSrc();
void setSrc(String arg);
String getText();
void setText(String arg);
/**
* This attribute identifies the scripting language of code embedded within a script
element or referenced via the element’s src
attribute. This is specified as a MIME type; examples of supported MIME types include text/javascript
, text/ecmascript
, application/javascript
, and application/ecmascript
. If this attribute is absent, the script is treated as JavaScript.
*/
String getType();
void setType(String arg);
}