I would like to know how to change the url without redirecting like on this website http://dekho.com.pk/ads-in-lahore when we click on tabs the url changes but the page dosent reload completely. There are other questions on stackoverflow indicating that it is not possible but i would like to know how the above mentioned website have implemented it. Thanks
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On the link you mentioned, same webservice is called but with different parameters. – Sushant Gupta Sep 16 '12 at 11:01
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[`history.pushState()`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/Manipulating_the_browser_history). There's also jQuery in there, but that particular technique has got to be. push state with a fall back for older browsers. – Jared Farrish Sep 16 '12 at 11:01
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You can also use window.location.hash and modify http://url.com/page#hash. – GG. Sep 16 '12 at 11:07
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[History.js](https://github.com/balupton/History.js/) seems to be a fairly comprehensive take on the `pushState` technique. See the [demos](http://balupton.github.com/history.js/demo/). – Jared Farrish Sep 16 '12 at 11:11
2 Answers
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use pushState
:
window.history.pushState(data, title, url);
LE: since modern browsers changed behaviour, use replaceState
instead:
window.history.replaceState(data, title, url);

Mihai Iorga
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1refer link for more details http://diveintohtml5.info/history.html – Prathamesh Rasam Aug 15 '15 at 11:57
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1@Pierre thanks, window.history.replaceState(data, title, url); is especially useful if you do not want to mess with the actual history, so when the user clicks back they go to the previous page, not the previous url you pushed. – VoidZA Feb 17 '22 at 17:08
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If you want to know exactly what they using, it's Backbone.js (see lines 4574
and 4981
). It's all mixed up in there with the jQuery source, but these are the relevant lines of the annotated Backbone.Router
source documentation page:
The support checks:
this._wantsPushState = !!this.options.pushState;
this._hasPushState = !!(this.options.pushState && window.history && window.history.pushState);
The route
function:
route: function(route, name, callback) {
Backbone.history || (Backbone.history = new History);
if (!_.isRegExp(route)) route = this._routeToRegExp(route);
if (!callback) callback = this[name];
Backbone.history.route(route, _.bind(function(fragment) {
var args = this._extractParameters(route, fragment);
callback && callback.apply(this, args);
this.trigger.apply(this, ['route:' + name].concat(args));
Backbone.history.trigger('route', this, name, args);
}, this));
return this;
},
Choosing between hash and push states:
// Depending on whether we're using pushState or hashes, and whether
// 'onhashchange' is supported, determine how we check the URL state.
if (this._hasPushState) {
Backbone.$(window).bind('popstate', this.checkUrl);
} else if (this._wantsHashChange && ('onhashchange' in window) && !oldIE) {
Backbone.$(window).bind('hashchange', this.checkUrl);
} else if (this._wantsHashChange) {
this._checkUrlInterval = setInterval(this.checkUrl, this.interval);
}
More on what they're up to:
// If we've started off with a route from a `pushState`-enabled browser,
// but we're currently in a browser that doesn't support it...
if (this._wantsHashChange && this._wantsPushState && !this._hasPushState && !atRoot) {
this.fragment = this.getFragment(null, true);
this.location.replace(this.root + this.location.search + '#' + this.fragment);
// Return immediately as browser will do redirect to new url
return true;
// Or if we've started out with a hash-based route, but we're currently
// in a browser where it could be `pushState`-based instead...
} else if (this._wantsPushState && this._hasPushState && atRoot && loc.hash) {
this.fragment = this.getHash().replace(routeStripper, '');
this.history.replaceState({}, document.title, this.root + this.fragment);
}
if (!this.options.silent) return this.loadUrl();
And the coup 'd grace:
// If pushState is available, we use it to set the fragment as a real URL.
if (this._hasPushState) {
this.history[options.replace ? 'replaceState' : 'pushState']({}, document.title, url);
}
You should read the annotated Backbone.js link I provided at the top. Very informative.

Jared Farrish
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Thank you for your answer.it was very informative. i dont know backbone yet so i am going for the pushstate as it fulfills all my needs. – kb858 Sep 16 '12 at 12:33
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Backbone.js is built around it's router, as it's a "single page app". Although you may not be experienced enough yet to see it in my answer above, that's *exactly* what Backbone.js is doing, as well has graceful degradation (for those who don't have browsers that support it). See my link in comment under your question; I'd use a library like https://github.com/balupton/History.js/, not roll your own. Unless you know what you're doing. – Jared Farrish Sep 16 '12 at 12:41
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