<html>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="josh.css">
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">

		<div id="Description">
			<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
				<tr><td valign="top" class="name">onload</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">2</span> IE <span class="emphasis">3</span> DOM <span class="emphasis">2</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal"></p>
					</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Bubbles: No; Cancelable: No&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>Fires when external content belonging to the current element or
object finishes loading and initializing. This event handler for the
<span class="literal">window</span> object is perhaps the most important
because it signals that all content of the document and its elements
(including external content) has loaded before the event fires. When
that event fires, your scripts can reference any document tree object
without error.
</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
						<tr>
							<td colspan="2"><p>			The event fires for a <span class="literal">frameset</span> element only after
the <span class="literal">onload</span> events for all frames have fired (but
the event is not bubbling from frame to frameset). Note that if the
user or a script loads a new page into a frame after the
frameset's initial load, the
<span class="literal">onload</span> event does not fire again for the frameset
(but it does for the frame).
</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
						<tr>
							<td colspan="2"><p>			Although the <span class="literal">onload</span> event has been supported for
<span class="literal">window</span> objects since the early days of scriptable
browsers, modern browsers fire the event on virtually any other
rendered element that loads external content.
</p>
							</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="typicaltargets"><span class="title">Typical Targets</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td colspan="2"><p>			For all browsers, <span class="literal">window</span> objects; for Version 4
browsers or later the <span class="literal">img</span> element; for IE 4 or
later and Netscape 6, add any rendered element capable of loading
external content.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
			</table>
		</div>
</body>
</html>