Document.title

Gets or sets the title of the document.

Syntax

JavaScript
var docTitle = document.title;

title is a string containing the document's title. If the title was overridden by setting document.title, returns that value. Otherwise returns the title specified in the markup (see the Notes below).

JavaScript
document.title = newTitle;

newTitle is the new title of the document. The assignment affects the return value of document.title, the title displayed for the document (e.g. in the titlebar of the window), and it also affects the DOM of the document (e.g. the content of the <title> element in an HTML document).

Example

JavaScript
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Hello World!</title> 
</head>
<body>

<script>
alert(document.title); // displays "Hello World!"
document.title = "Goodbye World!";
alert(document.title); // displays "Goodbye World!"
</script>

</body>
</html>

Notes

This property applies to HTML, SVG, XUL, and other documents in Gecko.

For HTML documents the initial value of document.title is the text content of the <title> element. For XUL it's the value of the title attribute of the window or other top-level XUL element.

In XUL, accessing document.title before the document is fully loaded has undefined behavior (document.title may return an empty string and setting document.title may have no effect).

Specification

License

© 2016 Mozilla Contributors
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-us/docs/web/api/document/title

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