Ie8 Javascript Error Popup
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of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up how to debug javascript errors on IE8 up vote 11 down vote favorite 3 I am getting an error has occurred in the script on this page an error, when running a webpage on IE8. When I click on the error found, it says: How can I go to this line to see where the error is happening? I can't see this error on any other browser. Also, it says: line 109213803. I don't understand this, as obviously I don't have so many lines of code. Can someone explain what IE8 is telling me here? javascript jquery debugging internet-explorer-8 object doesn't support this property or method share|improve this question edited Sep 11 '14 at 16:12 ControlAltDel 16.8k52149 asked Mar 17 '11 at 3:43 leora 17.8k2286341117 2 Open the Developer Tool (hit F12) and find out! (Probably just because IE is being IE.) –Haochi Mar 17 '11 at 3:48 @Haochi - i dont understand . .hitting f12 does not go to this line –leora Mar 17 '11 at 4:09 add a comment| 6 Answers 6 active oldest votes up vote 19 down vote accepted Make sure script debugging is not disabled for IE, otherwise it should allow you to debug the script directly: share|improve this answer answered Mar 17 '11 at 3:53 BrokenGlass 113k9199253 add a comment| up vote 6 down vote IE8 has a default built-in IE Developer tool, you can use that to debug that. Hit F12 it will open the Dev Toolbar then click the Script Tab and Start Debugging, then refresh your page. That's it! share|improve this answer edited Oct 29 '13 at 3:59 answered Mar 17 '11 at 3:49 rob waminal 7,08793552 add a comment| up vote 2 down vote Try using the Developer tools found under the tools menu. There is a script tab that will allow you to debug. You can also get there by hitting the F12 key. share|improv
unless you are a web developer, you just don't care about these messages and don't want them to appear. Turning them off won't hurt the operation
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of any program, so here is how to turn off scripting error messages in Internet Explorer. These messages say things like "Errors on this webpage might cause it to work incorrectly." The first thing to try is turning off these messages in Internet Explorer: Open Internet Explorer Open the Tools menu (Alt and T) Select the Internet Options item http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5334637/how-to-debug-javascript-errors-on-ie8 (O key) The Internet Options dialog has many tabs. You need the Advanced tab. Press Control and Tab until you get to the Advanced Tab (that's six presses for Internet Explorer 8) You should now be in a list, starting with Accessibility as the first item in Internet Explorer 8. This has the scripting options you want to change. https://www.webbie.org.uk/scriptingErrors.htm Cursor down to "Disable script debugging (Internet Explorer)" and press Space until it is on. Cursor down to "Disable script debugging (Other)" and press Space until it is on. Cursor down to "Display a notification about every script error" and press Space until it is off. Press the Return key to close the Internet Options dialog. You should now have turned off the scripting errors. Not worked? Here are some other things you can try: Update Internet Explorer. You should be on the latest Internet Explorer, it's safer and better. You can get it from Windows Update. Start Internet Explorer, Alt and T for the Tools menu, then cursor down to Windows Update. Change your antivirus program. These cause no end of trouble. Set your Internet Explorer Security settings to Default. You do this again in the Internet Explorer Tools menu, Internet Options, Security tab, and click Default Level. Delete your Internet Explorer temporary files and cookies and history. Internet Options, General tab. This will mean you'll have to re-enter your username and password in plac
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8, 200936 Share 0 0 For the past several months, I’ve had the unique pleasure of helping to diagnose a variety of web site compatibility problems. Now I realize that I just called debugging web site issues a “unique pleasure”—why? Because I was able to use IE8’s enhanced script error dialog and developer tools! I found that script errors are one of the most common web site compatibility issues—often the source of many visual discrepancies in the layout of a page. These errors raise a lot of questions. What can you do to remedy pages that have script errors? How can you provide helpful feedback to sites that experience script errors? And as web developers, how can you utilize IE8’s built in developer tools to resolve script errors? In this post, I present three scenarios that you may experience when encountering a page with script errors; for each scenario, I highlight the improvements we’ve made in IE8 and also discuss how you can use these improvements. “Out for a stroll on the web” In the first scenario, let’s assume that you know nothing about JavaScript, HTML, or any other technologies that constitute the building blocks of the web. You come across a site that doesn’t seem to be working; perhaps something visible on the website doesn’t look quite right. You might also notice a small “warning” icon in the status bar. How can you fix it? First, it’s important to remember that users in this scenario make up approximately 99% of people that use a web browser. It’s easy to forget that sometimes. These people want the web to “just work.” User research studies and telemetry data revealed that many users who encounter a web site problem hit the refresh button to try and fix it (possibly because refresh fixes other issues commonly found with slow network connections, such as style sheets or dependent scripts that may have timed out or not fully downloaded; these result in pages that don’t look right). We anticipate that most compatibility issues will appear on sites that are rendered in Internet Explorer 8’s most standards-compliant mode due to changes to comply with standards, and so we use the refresh button as one of the reminders to help users discover the compatibility view button, which may fix the users' immediate issue. Summary Compatibility view: switches IE8’s rendering engine (and DOM) into a legacy mode that is compatible with older browsers (e.g., IE7) “Custome