I was successfully using Javascript code for years to open a new browser window and assign it a unique name without any problems. That is, until now. :-)

The following Javascript code works properly with any other website I've tried, except for facebook.com:

<a href="javascript: void(0)"
   onclick="window.open('http://facebook.com/USERNAME_GOES_HERE',
  'windowname1',
  'width=600, \
   height=500, \
   directories=no, \
   location=no, \
   menubar=no, \
   resizable=no, \
   scrollbars=1, \
   status=no, \
   toolbar=no');
  return false;">Become a friend on Facebook:</A>
The above action, will open a window, but if the visitor to the web page clicks on that same link again, it opens yet another new window. It shouldn't do that, because 'windowname1' should simply cause the user to bring that window up front, not create a duplicate window each time the link is clicked.

I have tried variations of the above code, but they all fail as I described when it comes to facebook.com, but works well on many other websites I tried.

I'm not a web browser guru, so I can only guess at how the internals of it work for assigned 'windowname1'. But here is my theory and I'd greatly appreciate comments on this. I suspect that when facebook.com is loaded it immediately renamed the assigned window to some unique window name perhaps with embedded UNIX time stamp to make it extremely unique. If my theory is correct, is there any way to have your own window name be used instead? Or is there some other Javascript coding method to accomplish this with Facebook.com that someone is just itching to tell me about? If my theory is wrong about facebook.com, can someone explain why they might be doing this and what advantage is there to Facebook.com being more difficult than the other websites? :-)

Thanks in advance,

David Roth

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