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1-9 of 9 Javascript Navigation > Windows sites are shown.
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One of the trickier aspects of javascript is using it together with frames. This tutorial introduces the main points you need to know.
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Otherwise known as full screen mode and completely full screen mode - the latter is uncloseable by the mouse - you need to use Alt f4 to close it - be warned!
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Determine whether a window opened through JavaScript (using window.open()) is still open at a particular moment in the future.
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This shows how to open up a new window, and write the new page.
The contents of that new window/new page contain the logic necessary to close the window that opened it up. (opener is the object).
It is necessary to open and close the document object before and after you write the new contents (IE doesn't care - but Netscape does!)
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How to open a new window with JavaScript
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The basic "window.status" mouseover. Useful, yet overused
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This shows how to have a box pop up when you mouse over a given area on the page.
This example uses a simple text as the trigger. When you mouse out of the target area, the box goes away.
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For the uninitiated, a `remote control` in JavaScript refers to a small secondary window that contains links that load the specified document in the main window when clicked.
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JavaScript has come a long way since it`s inception in NS 2, when only about a dozen components (such as the background color) on the page could be accessed and manipulated programmatically.
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