When I load Bootstrap popver content with ajax, the popover is not showing.
Javascript:
var id = 1;
$.post("load.php?pageid",
{
pageid:id;
},
function(data,status){
document.getElementById("body").innerHTML=data;
});
HTML response:
hover for popover
<script>
$(function ()
{ $("#example").popover();
});
</script>
When I place the HTML response above directly in the <body id="body"></body> code, the popover works fine. I dont understand what is going wrong here.
The problem is that you're setting up the popover inside of the function $(). Rather than
$(function ()
{ $("#example").popover();
});
It should be just
$("#example").popover();
Or perhaps better
$(document).ajaxComplete(function() {
$("#example").popover();
});
The reason being that any function inside of $() is run when the document is first finished loading, when the "document ready" event is fired. When that code is pasted inside of the original HTML, it works because it's present when the document finishes loading.
When it's the response from an AJAX call, it won't run inside of $(), because the "document ready" event already fired some time ago.
with the help of jQuery you can initialize all things that needs to be initialized using
$(document).ajaxSuccess(function () {
$("[data-toggle=popover]").popover();
$("[data-toggle=tooltip]").tooltip();
// any other code
});
inspired from Olaf Dietsche answer
<script>$(function () { $('[data-toggle="tooltip"]').tooltip()});</script>
Add this at the end of whatever you are loading in with ajax. You should already have this somewhere to opt-in to the tooltip, but put it again to re-initialize the tooltip.
Related
I am a beginner in playing with jQuery/AJAX, my goal is to load content to the div below:
<div id="blogcontentloaded">
</div>
I came up with .load and it worked, the page loads but it keeps refreshing and loads over and over.
$(function loadBlog(e) {
$('#blogcontentloaded').load('/blog/page1.html');
e.preventDefault();
return false;
});
I tried using e.preventDefault but it doesn't work for me.
Also my goal is to do this without any buttons. When main page loads portion of the page that I want to load along with main page is going to be for updating the content in loaded element.
Thanks for the help!
You can use the javascript load function. It may solve your problem. here you can get some information about windows load and jQuery ready functions.
$( window ).on( "load", function() {
$('#blogcontentloaded').load('/blog/page1.html');
});
You need to wrap the function in the 'ready' function and make sure that it is executed once:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('#blogcontentloaded').load('/blog/page1.html');
});
Have you used the jQuery file on the top of other js files?
Add the jQuery.js file
$(document).ready(function(){
$('#blogcontentloaded').load('/blog/page1.html');
e.preventDefault();
return false;
})
I load a part of my basketpage inside an accordion div in my header. This works great and shows my basket in a nice dropdown.
The last problem I need to solve with this is to get the buttons in the loaded content to work. Is it possible to write an callback that make these works? Im not sure even what to google for this one..
This is how the buttons is setup in the loaded content:
checkout
Script Im using to load the content:
$('.dcjqg-accordion ul.sub-menu').load('/m4n?seid=etailer-basket div#centerbox.itembox.centerbox');
use the callback function of .load().
$('.dcjqg-accordion ul.sub-menu').load('/m4n?seid=etailer-basket div#centerbox.itembox.centerbox', function() {
$("#_ec_oie2").on("click", function() {
if (UI.pb_boolean(this, 'click')) { }
return false;
});
});
checkout
You need to use a child selector for the event. You can attach an event to the .sub-menu element that will fire on the content loaded in through the ajax. Something like the following could work:
$(".dcjqg-accordion ul.sub-menu").on("click", ".action.actionbasket.checkout", function() {
if( UI.pb_boolean(this, 'click') ) {}
return false;
});
Notice the second parameter to the on method. It is a selector that will be used to look at the target of the click event. I used .action.actionbasket.checkout since that is what is on your a tag.
This code may not work exactly, but this should help get you in the right direction.
Here is the link to the jQuery documentation for the on method: https://api.jquery.com/on/
I'm trying to load html content dynamically with jQuery:
$('panel').load('pages/Panel.html', function() {
alert("Load was performed.");
});
The Panel.html is a simple HTML:
<div>Hello</div>
The panel HTML loads successfully but the load callback is never called.
Tried IE8/9/10 and nothing worked.
Any idea?
Thanks
I think you haven't an element panel in your DOM. So may be this one $('panel') should be something like $('.panel')?
But it should work as well with $('panel')...
So by modifing it this way
$('panel').load('pages/Panel.html', function(me)
{
console.info(me);
alert("Load was performed.");
});
Does console.info returns something?
It should pass the html just appended to the element
I have page with a form and a table (to show results of the saved data using the form).
The form uses ajax to submit the data, data saved and the table should be reloaded afterwards.
The problem is that the table (which is loaded using AJAX($.load)) is loaded after the execution of $(document).ready(). which implies that the table does not have the required functionality.
Is there any approach where i can postpone the execution of $(document).ready() until the AJAX finish its loading, or shall i use a complete different approach like using iframe?
below is an example of my problem:
$(document).ready(function(){
//some code here that needed for the html in table.html e.g. datepicker, chosen, jqueryui, etc
});
<form>
//Inputs with a button to submit using ajax, where the result is displayed using table.php
</form>
<div id="tableOfContent"></div>
<script>
$('#tableOfContent').load("table.php");
</script>
You can do
$('#tableOfContent').load("table.php",function(){
//completed load actions here
});
But you should note that if you load images, they will not be loaded yet. If that is the case, you can make the contents of table.php initially hidden and do the same again inside for $('#tableOfContent img').load(). This would work for 1 image; multiple images is a bit more complicated, but feel free to ask if that is what you are looking for :)
You can delay the ready event using jQuery.holdReady():
$.holdReady(true);
// Do your custom stuff... the document may already be loaded.
$.holdReady(false); // Now the ready event will fire as soon as the DOM is loaded.
See http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.holdReady/
document.ready is called when the HTML of the page has finished loading, there's no two ways about it.
What you can do, however, is use live binding, which will attach handlers to elements that are not yet on the page.
Example:
$(".datepicker").live("click", function() {
$(this).datepicker();
})
Updated for jQuery >1.7 (this is also faster)
$("#tableOfContent").on("click", ".datepicker", function() {
$(this).datepicker();
})
Load the table data from within the ready function and use the complete event of the load() function to call the remainder
$(document).ready(function() {
// click bindings etc ..
$('#tableOfContent').load("table.php",function() {
// things to do once the table is loaded
});
});
load() documentation
$(document).ready() should be used for scripts that should execute, well, when document is ready.
If you need to execute something after an ajax call, you may write everything within a function and call it with the ajax callback.
function what_i_need() {
// bla bla
}
<script>
$('#tableOfContent').load("table.php", {}, what_i_need);//code had syntax error; '{)'
</script>
I'm not sure. Plus, you can call the function when document is ready too.
$(document).ready(function(){
what_i_need();
});
This my javascript :-
<script type ="text/javascript">
$(function()
{
$("#tabs").tabs({ cache: true ,fx: { opacity: 'toggle' }});
});
</script>
And this is my html which loads php file using ajax :-
<ul>
<li>General</li>
<li>Messages</li>
<li>Pics</li>
<li>Facilities</li>
</ul>
The question i want to know is when Messages.php is loaded does the javascript onload event fire? I want to know because i want to take my textarea and convert it into editor. However i am not able to capture window.onload event :-
window.onload = function(){
alert('hello');
}
and further if i write something in :-
$(function(){
}
It works in Opera and IE but sometimes doesn't work sometimes. To sum, how do i capture window.onload in the above situation?
EDIT
Looks like $(function(){ } seems to be working, the problem is with fx: { opacity: 'toggle' }. When i remove effect, it works fine.
Thanks in advance :)
The window.onload event will not fire, in the document you're loading into it already fired earlier.
You should be able to use document.ready, e.g. $(function() { }); in the page you're fetching and it work, provided you're on at least jQuery 1.4.2+. Several issues were fixed with events in the 1.4.2 release, including one around this being inconsistent, if you're using 1.4.1 or below, I can't promise it being 100% consistent.
Alternatively, you can have the code in the main page instead of inside Messages.php and run the code in the load event of the tabs, like this:
$("#tabs").bind("tabsload", function(event, ui) {
$('.myEditorClass', ui.panel).myEditorPlugin();
});
I've noticed in some browsers that if you use display:none it won't render anything inside that tag, it just ignores whatever's in there because it's not being displayed. I'm not sure if that fx setting is using .hide(), but that could part of the issue.
Also why not set up a function on the loaded pages called "init", then have ajax do a callback to trigger it?