How to remove on click from sorting table header - javascript

First time post although I've been following helpful advice from here for a while.
I've a table that is being sorted via some Jquery functions that I didn't build myself so not sure how it operates. If a header column is clicked it sorts the table by that column firtst up then down - standard stuff. I'd like to remove the sorting on the first column as this is a series of checkboxes and the sorting is interfering with the checkall function on a mobile.
I've tried using the following script. First to remove the sorting class, and then to try and remove the on click function. The class is being removed (so the javascript is working) but one can still click the header at which point a new class is assigned so this removeAttr isn't really working (which was the solution I'd found on this site).
<script>
!function ($) {
$(function(){
$('th:first-child').removeClass( "sorting" );
$('th:first-child').removeAttr('onclick');
})
}(window.jQuery)
</script>
Any help gratefully received. Many thanks, DomC

The reason the .removeAttr('onclick') doesnt work is because there is a global eventhandler, probably in some .js file (which is the proper place!). The onclick would be inline javascript, which is a no-no!
To get it out of the global eventhandler list, use jQuery's .off():
// this removes all functions bound on the 'click event
$('th:first-child').off('click');
Or, if you have an older version of jQuery, .unbind():
// this removes all functions bound on the 'click event (older jQuery example)
$('th:first-child').unbind('click');
Or, if you want only one function turned off:
// If ´otherFunction´ is bound to click aswell, it will remain working
$('th:first-child').off('click', functionname);
Or, remove ALL events (ie click, hover, resize):
// Or the big cleanup, this clears ALL functions from ALL events
$('th:first-child').off();

#Martijn answer will probably do what you want. But i am putting more details here.
It depends on how the events (click) are registered.
removing the class or onclick attribute from the first header cell may not help.
They may have been used for binding the onclick event to that element. But You need to unbind the event.
When a user clicks on the header cell, it triggers an event. There are methods binded to the events which gets executed on the trigger. There may be one or multiple such methods which gets executed on the event.
In this case the event is click.
To remove bindings for all the methods for click, you can use following -
$('th:first-child').off('click');
//For old Jquery Version as mentioned by #Matijn
//$('th:first-child').unbind('click');
If you wish to unbind a specific method -
$('th:first-child').off('click', reference_to_function);

Related

Attaching multiple click events without having to repeat myself

Here is the fiddle.
Ignore the styling, that's not important.
Basically I needed to open the Fancybox with two links present, but I only want one gallery image. I figured that out easily enough. When the thumbnail is clicked it triggers the li anchor.
To keep the galleries separate I did unique classes for each ol.
The problem I have run into is I will be repeating myself.
I attempted to do a loop (commented out), but the logic is beyond my grasp.
What is the best way to attach a new click handler (I need to add 8 more) without repeating myself in my current fashion? I've also tried a function with a couple parameters, but I had trouble with the e.preventDefault().
I greatly appreciate any guidance, thanks!
This looks like a great use case to use jQuery's on() method. on() is a method that will allow you to establish a handler on an outer container that can listen to its children for click events. So, for example: if you specified a class of .js-listen on your lists, you could call on() like this:
$('.js-listen').on('click', 'other-selector', function(e){
// function logic with either $(this) or e.target goes here
}
This block would essentially look for all elements with .js-listen and then when something inside the element with the .js-listen class is clicked, the event will bubble up through the DOM and the event will be handled according to the element that was clicked. The second parameter I have 'other-selector' can be a class name, element, or ID. so you could essentially put something like img there and it would fire the event if the child element clicked was an <img> tag.
This prevents you from attaching a handler a million times, and one of the benefits of on() is that if elements are dynamically added to the container with the handler, you don't have to worry about attaching handlers to those elements, because again, they bubble up!
Hope this helps!

Handle stuff after dom changes

I've got a page with some Javascript / jQuery stuff, for example:
(function()
{
$('.tip').tooltip();
$('.test').click(function()
{
alert('Clicked!')
});
}();
On the page I insert some HTML with jQuery so the DOM changes. For example, I insert a extra element with the class "tip" or "test". The just new inserted elements doesn't work because jQuery is working with the non-manipulated DOM and the just inserted elements aren't there. So I've searched around and came to this solution for the "click":
$('body').on('click','.click',function()
{
alert('Clicked!')
});
I don't understand why, but this way it's working with the manipulated DOM and the jQuery stuff works on the new inserted elements. So my first question is, why does this work and just the click() function not? And the second question, why do I have to point to the "body"?
Finally, my third question is, how get this done with the tooltip?
I know that there is so many information about this subject (previous the delegate() and live() function I've read) but I can't found a explanation about it. And I can't get my third question solved with the information I found.
I'm looking forward to your responses!
Extra question:
4) Is it recommended to point always to the "body" for this kind of situations? It's always there but for possible performance issues?
So my first question is, why does this work and just the click()
function not?
Because the event handler is now delegated to a parent element, so it remains even after replacing/manipulating child elements.
Ancient article on event delegation for your perusal - but the concepts remain the same:
http://www.sitepoint.com/javascript-event-delegation-is-easier-than-you-think/
And the second question, why do I have to point to the "body"
You don't, any suitable parent element will do. For example, any direct parent (a div wrapper, for instance) which does not get replaced.
Finally, my third question is, how get this done with the tooltip?
You need to re-initialize your tooltip plugin on the newly inserted elements. For example:
$.get("foo.html", function (html) {
$("#someDiv").html(html);
$("#someDiv").find(".tip").tooltip();
});
The click() event doesn't work when you manipulate the DOM because JQuery is not watching for DOM changes. When you bind the click() event it is selecting the elements that are on the page at that time. New ones are not in the list unless you explicitly bind the event.
Because you have pointed the click() event on the body. JQuery then checks to see if the target of the click matches any of the event handlers (like what you have created) match the element clicked. This way any new elements will get the event 'associated' with them.
Because the tooltip isn't an event that you can place on the body, you will need to re-initialize it when the element is created.
EDIT:
For your fourth question, is it depends. The advantage of binding to the body is that you don't accidentally bind an event to an element more than once. The disadvantage is that you are adding event handlers that need to be checked on each event and this can lead to performance issues.
As for your concerns about DRY, put the initialization of the tooltips into a function and call that when you add them. Trying to avoid having the same function call is a little overkill in this regard, IMO.
Events are bound to the specific object you are binding it to.
So something like $('.tip').tooltip() will perform the tooltip() functionality on $('.tip') which is actually just a collection of objects that satisfies the css selector .tip. The thing you should take note of is, that collection is not dynamic, it is basically a "database" query of the current page, and returns a resultset of HTML DOM objects wrapped by jQuery.
Therefore calling tooptip() on that collection will only perform the tooltip functionality on the objects within that collection, anything that was not in that collection when tooltip is called will not have the tooltip functionality. So adding an element that satisfies the .tip selector, after the tooltip() call, will not give it the tooltip functionality.
Now, $('body').on('click','.click', func) is actually binding the click event to the body tag (which should always exist :P), but what happens is it captures whether the click event has passed through an element your target css selector (.click in this case), so since the check is done dynamically, new elements will be captured.
This is a relatively short summary of what's going on... I hope it helped
UPDATE:
Best way for your tooltip thing is to bind tooltip after you have added elements, e.g.
$('#container').load('www.example.com/stuff', function() {
$('.tip', $(this)).tooltip();
});

Can I iterate through for loop to create more javascript?

I need to have multiple .click() functions populated on page load, based on how many image records are stored within a mysql database.
so far i have a page that will nicely switch between photos with a <ul> of image buttons
but i have to hand write the jquery that deals with it.
is there a way that i can populate a .js file with the correct amount of .click() functions based on the amount of records on in the data base.
In addition to Alex's answer, if you want to set the click event of elements that don't exist yet or haven't been added to the page, you could do:
$(body).on('click','a.record',function(){
//any existing or future a element with class record will have this click function
});
Instead of adding a separate onclick handler to each element, you should use event delegation and attach a single event handler to some container. Said event handles would catch all the onclick events , as the bubble up through DOM.
You don't need to write a click() for each unique element.
Instead, you could select a bunch of elements with a selector, such as $('a.record') and then chain click() to that...
$('a.record').click(function() {
// Any `a` element with a class of `record` was clicked.
});
The disadvantage of doing it this way is you add a bunch of event listeners and it won't be triggered for future elements.
As others have mentioned, event delegation using on() (if using a newer jQuery) or delegate() (if using an older) is the best, as it only attaches one event listener and will work with future elements added after the event is attached.
$(document).on('click', 'a.record', function() {
// Any `a` element with a class of `record` was clicked, now or in the future.
});
I've used document here, but you should use the nearest ancestor which won't change, which may be the ul element you have described.

JQuery click anywhere except certain divs and issues with dynamically added html

I want this webpage to highlight certain elements when you click on one of them, but if you click anywhere else on the page, then all of these elements should no longer be highlighted.
I accomplished this task by the following, and it works just fine except for one thing (described below):
$(document).click(function() {
// Do stuff when clicking anywhere but on elements of class suggestion_box
$(".suggestion_box").css('background-color', '#FFFFFF');
});
$(".suggestion_box").click(function() {
// means you clicked on an object belonging to class suggestion_box
return false;
});
// the code for handling onclicks for each element
function clickSuggestion() {
// remove all highlighting
$(".suggestion_box").css('background-color', '#FFFFFF');
// then highlight only a specific item
$("div[name=" + arguments[0] + "]").css('background-color', '#CCFFCC');
}
This way of enforcing the highlighting of elements works fine until I add more html to the page without having a new page load. This is done by .append() and .prepend()
What I suspected from debugging was that the page is not "aware" of the new elements that were added to the page dynamically. Despite the new, dynamically added elements having the appropriate class names/IDs/names/onclicks ect, they never get highlighted like the rest of the elements (which continue to work fine the entire time).
I was wondering if a possible reason for why my approach does not work for the dynamically added content is that the page is not able to recognize the elements that were not present during the pageload. And if this is a possibility, then is there a way to reconcile this without a pageload?
If this line of reasoning is wrong, then the code I have above is probably not enough to show what's wrong with my webpage. But I'm really just interested in whether or not this line of thought is a possibility.
Use .live to "Attach a handler to the event for all elements which match the current selector, now and in the future". Example:
$(".suggestion_box").live("click", function() {
// means you clicked on an object belonging to className
return false;
});
Also see .delegate, which is similar.
Since the .live() method handles events once they have propagated to the top of the document, it is not possible to stop propagation of live events. Similarly, events handled by .delegate() will always propagate to the element to which they are delegated; event handlers on any elements below it will already have been executed by the time the delegated event handler is called.
from the jQuery documentation =)
(only to explain better why #karim79 also suggested the delegate method ;P )

How do I register a Javascript event handler to an element that hasn't been added to the page yet

I'm trying to build a greasemonkey script which will dynamically create tables of data based on user interaction with... other dynamically created tables of data. My problem is that I'm having to make two passes every time I create a table: one to create the table, and another to go grab all of the objects in the table I want to add event handlers to (by id) and add the various event handlers to them.
If I attempt to, say, add an onClick event to a table td before I've created the table and inserted it into the HTML, I get a "component is not available" exception.
This is incredibly cumbersome, because I either have to maintain, separately, a list of the ids and what I should do to those elements when I make my second pass to add the handlers, or develop a naming convention by which I know, based on the id, what I should do with the element.
There HAS to be a better way to do this. I just haven't figured it out yet. Anyone have any ideas?
Firstly, I'd love to know why you need a different ID for every single TD. Is the ID holding important information, such as an index? In this situation it might be better creating each TD within a loop. Also, obviously you can't attach an event handler to a DOM element which doesn't exist! It doesn't have to be injected into the DOM but it DOES have to exist in some capacity.
jQuery's live() isn't a magical mystery, it just uses event delegation, so it attaches the event to a parent element, such as the table and then decides what happens dependent on the target of the click. Here's a rudimentary example. I register a handler to the 'body' element, and then I test each time to see what the target is, if it's a TD element I doSomething() ->
document.body.onclick = function(e) {
var realTarget = e ? e.target : window.event.srcElement;
if ( realTarget.nodeName.toLowerCase() === 'td' ) {
doSomething();
}
};
Event delegation relies on something called event bubbling (or "propogation") which is the way in which modern browsers implement the event model. Each event, when triggered will travel upwards through the DOM until it can go no further. So if you click on an anchor within a paragraph the anchor's 'click' event will fire and THEN the paragraph's 'click' event will fire etc. etc.
jQuery 1.3+ has a new live() function that can set up event handlers for elements that don't exist yet .. check it out
You have to wait for the element to be added to the page, then add the event handler then.
There is no easy way to say "add this to all elements of this type, now and in the future".
It is possible to have a timer periodically check the page for new elements, applying a queue of events (or other properties) to them as they appear, all behind the scenes. This can be abstracted out and re-used, for example Jquery can do that sort of thing.
As JimmyP pointed out, your problem can easily be solved using event bubbling. You might consider writing a wrapper function to work around browser inconsistencies - my own version can be found here and would be used like this:
capture('click', '#element-id', function(event) {
// `this` will be the originating element
// return `false` to prevent default action
});

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