PHP side. Same effect.
But now a days, you shouldn't have to worry about the user not having
JS enabled.
On Jan 19, 12:57 am, AD7six <andydawso...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jan 18, 10:04 pm, Miles J <mileswjohn...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > You can't detect if JS is enabled via PHP.
>
> You can, however, do something ball-achingly simple like this:
>
> <script>
> (function() {
> var img = document.createElement("img");
> img.setAttribute("src", "/I/haz/js.gif");
> document.body.appendChild(img);
> }());
> </script>
> <noscript>
> <img src="/i/haz/not/js.gif">
> <noscript>
>
> Route each of those 2 permutations to a controller which e.g. logs the
> result to the session and then returns a 1px gif image; and if you
> really need to know - you know.
>
> AD
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