What's Making Every Embedded Object Contentdocument "unique" Even Having Two (or More) Istances Of The Same Object Source? February 28, 2024 Post a Comment I put several instances of the same object in an HTML page. In my case I'm dealing with SVG and I have something like this: Solution 1: This isn't a specific browser mechanic. It is just that the browser is actually simpler than you think.The fact that the three embedded "documents" come from the same file is irrelevant. It is still three different objects, because you explicitly specified three object tags. The three SVG instances are each interpreted (executed/rendered) independently. Maybe some script inside the SVG is generating some random shapes? Then you'll have three different images. You need to realize that a "document" isn't just the file from which it comes from. A document holds the entire state of execution of the file (and eventually its inner scripts). So it has to be like that. Of course, the browser certainly fetches "same.svg" only once, due to caching. But still, it is executed three times, and therefore, there needs to be three different content documents (each with its own specific state).Baca JugaAbout Javascript And Dom, Is This Standdards-compliant?How Do I Find The Id Of An Element That Was Clicked?How To Retrieve Firebase Database Start From Bottom To Up?So there can be no ambiguity with the method you're using. Share You may like these postsIs There A Way To Detect If I'm Hovering Over Text?Merge Equal Table Cells With JqueryJavascript Setinterval Works But Not Infinite LoopHow To Select An Element That Matches A Part Of The Element's Inner Text Using Xpath With Javascript Post a Comment for "What's Making Every Embedded Object Contentdocument "unique" Even Having Two (or More) Istances Of The Same Object Source?"