Modifying location.hash without page scrolling

Solution 1:

Step 1: You need to defuse the node ID, until the hash has been set. This is done by removing the ID off the node while the hash is being set, and then adding it back on.

hash = hash.replace( /^#/, '' );
var node = $( '#' + hash );
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', '' );
}
document.location.hash = hash;
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', hash );
}

Step 2: Some browsers will trigger the scroll based on where the ID'd node was last seen so you need to help them a little. You need to add an extra div to the top of the viewport, set its ID to the hash, and then roll everything back:

hash = hash.replace( /^#/, '' );
var fx, node = $( '#' + hash );
if ( node.length ) {
  node.attr( 'id', '' );
  fx = $( '<div></div>' )
          .css({
              position:'absolute',
              visibility:'hidden',
              top: $(document).scrollTop() + 'px'
          })
          .attr( 'id', hash )
          .appendTo( document.body );
}
document.location.hash = hash;
if ( node.length ) {
  fx.remove();
  node.attr( 'id', hash );
}

Step 3: Wrap it in a plugin and use that instead of writing to location.hash...

Solution 2:

Use history.replaceState or history.pushState* to change the hash. This will not trigger the jump to the associated element.

Example

$(document).on('click', 'a[href^=#]', function(event) {
  event.preventDefault();
  history.pushState({}, '', this.href);
});

Demo on JSFiddle

* If you want history forward and backward support

History behaviour

If you are using history.pushState and you don't want page scrolling when the user uses the history buttons of the browser (forward/backward) check out the experimental scrollRestoration setting (Chrome 46+ only).

history.scrollRestoration = 'manual';
  • spec
  • info

Browser Support

  • replaceState
  • pushState
  • polyfill

Solution 3:

I think I may have found a fairly simple solution. The problem is that the hash in the URL is also an element on the page that you get scrolled to. if I just prepend some text to the hash, now it no longer references an existing element!

$(function(){
    //This emulates a click on the correct button on page load
    if(document.location.hash){
     $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
     s=$(document.location.hash.replace("btn_","")).addClass('selected').attr("href").replace("javascript:","");
     eval(s);
    }

    //Click a button to change the hash
    $("#buttons li a").click(function(){
            $("#buttons li a").removeClass('selected');
            $(this).addClass('selected');
            document.location.hash="btn_"+$(this).attr("id")
            //return false;
    });
});

Now the URL appears as page.aspx#btn_elementID which is not a real ID on the page. I just remove "btn_" and get the actual element ID