Why is window.showModalDialog deprecated? What to use instead?

Why is window.showModalDialog deprecated?

From http://tjvantoll.com/2012/05/02/showmodaldialog-what-it-is-and-why-you-should-never-use-it/,

In general the idea of putting a native dialog implementation into the browser was a really good idea, but window.showModalDialog was a bad implementation that is riddled with issues and poor browser support. (…)

Note that (…) [a modal dialog using showModalDialog] is a full HTML document, not a snippet that is injected in. This is a characterizing feature of window.showModalDialog. It’s really just two completely separate windows communicating with each other. The fact that you have two separate windows and DOMs means you don’t have to worry about JS & DOM conflicts, which is appealing if you have a lot of bad JavaScript with a cluttered global scope. But mostly this just adds unnecessary complexity, complicates the browser implementation, and contributes to a number of bugs. (…)

While it’s important that modal dialogs prevent the user from interacting with the originating window, there’s no reason the user shouldn’t be allowed to interact with other tabs or native browser controls (back/forward, favorites, address bar, etc). (…) This is actually a big annoyance to the end user. (…)

The debugging experience for window.showModalDialog is horrible. (…) You’re basically forced to alert like it’s 1999 to determine what’s going on. (…)

Currently no major mobile browsers support window.showModalDialog, so if you’re looking for any sort of tablet / mobile support you need to stay away.

What to use instead?

HTML5 introduces the new <dialog> element, which can be used to display dialogs, including modal ones.

For example:

<dialog id="myDialog">
    Foo bar
    <button id="hide">Close</button>
</dialog>
<button id="show">Show Dialog</button>
var dialog = document.getElementById('myDialog');  
document.getElementById('show').onclick = function() {  dialog.showModal();  };  
document.getElementById('hide').onclick = function() {  dialog.close();      };

Demo

The problems are:

  • Browser support is currently negligible, but there is a polyfill.
  • It doesn’t pause JS execution.

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