I am trying to make ajax call on focus for every text input, I can make is in first page( when document ready) but when I change page , javascript can't parse inputs because it wasn't created when document is ready. How can I fix it ?
jQuery(document).ready( function(){
jQuery('[id^=urun_sirasi-]').focus(function(){
event.preventDefault();
var urun_sirasi=jQuery(this).data('sira');
console.log(urun_sirasi);
jQuery('#urun_sirasi-'+urun_sirasi).bind('keyup',function(e)
{
console.log(jQuery("#urun_sirasi-"+urun_sirasi).val());
jQuery.ajax({
url:'../ajax.php',
data:'process=siralama&urun_id='+urun_sirasi+'&urun_sirasi='+jQuery.trim(jQuery("#urun_sirasi-"+urun_sirasi).val()),
success:function(e){
// e -> 1 ve ya0 geliyor.
console.log(e);
}
});
});
});
});
Thanks for your help.
This seems to a very common problem in the jQuery section. See the docs for .on() at http://api.jquery.com/on/, specifically the section about delegated events:
Delegated events have the advantage that they can process events from
descendant elements that are added to the document at a later time.
I use the following syntax in the doc ready that will create events for all future items with the "expand" class, should be able to be adjusted for you
$(document).on('click',"#myTable .expand", function(){
so yours should be something like this (maybe give your items a class rather than having an event to each element selector)
$(document).on('keyup',"#yourTable .urun_sirasi-key", function(){
Related
I have code that works correctly
$(document).on('click',"a.img,a.imgs",function() {
$(this).next().find('a:first').click();
return false;
});
But when I add new fields ajax ( for example show more), then with them this code does not work, and it's sad
Edited my answer as I misread your code and got everything mixed up.
Here's an explanation from another SO thread that might help you fix the problem:
It's probably not working due to one of:
Not using recent version of jQuery
Not wrapping your code inside of DOM ready
or you are doing something which causes the event not to bubble up to the listener on the document.
$(document).ready(function() {
// This WILL work because we are listening on the 'document',
// for a click on an element with an ID of #test-element
$(document).on("click","#test-element",function() {
alert("click bound to document listening for #test-element");
});
// This will NOT work because there is no '#test-element' ... yet
$("#test-element").on("click",function() {
alert("click bound directly to #test-element");
});
// Create the dynamic element '#test-element'
$('body').append('<div id="test-element">Click mee</div>');
});
$(document).on("click"... not working?
i have this problem:
i am inserting certain html thru jquery. and in that inserted html i have a class to which i have binded a function. this function isnot beeing called, i have the feeling, the inserted html isnot seen yet by js.
my inserting code.
$(function(){
$('#einf').on('click', function(){
$('<tr><td><a class="ame">delete</a></td></td></tr>').insertAfter('#append_tr');
});
});
you can assume, inserting is working well. and this is my binded function:
$(function(){
$('.ame').on('click', function(){
alert('test');
});
});
i tested with already existing element with the same class ame, it is working with that. thanks for help and guidance
You have to run the click bind again on the added element.
Maybe something like this will work:
$('<tr><td><a class="ame">delete</a></td></td></tr>').insertAfter('#append_tr').find('.ame').on('click', function(){
alert('test');
});
Try with event delegation: http://jsfiddle.net/xehu9/
$('#einf').on('click', '.ame', function(e){ //<-----pass it here.
e.stopPropagation(); //<---------stop the event bubbling here.
alert('test');
});
This happens because you are trying to implement the click on a elem which is not present in the dom when page gets ready.
from the docs:
Event handlers are bound only to the currently selected elements; they must exist on the page at the time your code makes the call to .on().
try .live() instead .on()
http://jsfiddle.net/ThobiasN/Pt3db/
$(function(){
$('#einf').on('click', function(){ alert ('some');
$('<tr><td><a class="ame">delete</a></td></td></tr>').insertAfter('#append_tr');
});
$('.ame').live('click', function(){
alert('test');
});
});
You cannot reference an element that was dinamically created, because it's not in the DOM when javascript runs, I suggest you use TEMPLATES instead of dinamic html content.
However, if you want to follow this approach, jquery allows concadinating element methods:
$(function(){
$('#einf').on('click', function(){
$('<tr><td><a class="ame">delete</a></td></td></tr>')
.insertAfter('#append_tr')
.on('click',function(){
alert('test');
});
});
});
Here is what I'm doing... I have a textbox that users type something in and click an add icon. This fires some jquery code that adds the item they typed into a span within a "content" div. The generated code has a delete icon that appears on hover and when clicked it should make the span disappear. This works if the code is on the page already (before document load) but if it's dynamically created, it breaks the delete on click functionality.
Here is a JSfiddle so you can see it in action: http://jsfiddle.net/WF32y/
What can I do to fix this? I essentially want to do what happens on here (stackoverflow.com) when you enter tags to a new question.
Use event delegation for dynamically added elements by changing this:
$('a.delete').on('click', function(e) {
Into this:
$(document).on('click', 'a.delete', function(e) {
Fiddle
.on() Direct and delegated events reference
Also, concerning performance, you can attach the handler to a closer ancestor of the dynamically added elements than the document (e.g. a static wrapper element).
You can easily do it with delegate. In your case:
$('#container').delegate('a.delete','click', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
taskID = $(this).closest('.task')[0].id;
$(this).closest('.task').fadeTo(300, 0, function() {
$(this).animate({
width: 0
}, 200, function() {
$(this).remove();
});
});
});
And by the way FYI:
// jQuery version 1.4.3+
$('#container').delegate('a.delete'...
// jQuery 1.7+
$('#container').on('click', 'a.delete', function(e) {
it is faster and more propery way than:
$(document).on('a.delete'...
or:
$('body').delegate('a.delete'...
or:
$(document).delegate('a.delete'...
After using .load to update my div, that is add item to my list, I used firebug and saw that the list was updated. However, I lost the mouseover event that worked when the page first loaded. In my script js I have:
// hide and show are css classes that display none and block respectively
function openList(){
$("#miniList").removeClass().addClass("show");
}
function closeList(){
$("#miniList").removeClass().addClass("hide");
}
...
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#miniList").mouseover(function() {
openList();
})
$("#miniList").mouseout(function() {
closeList();
})
});
function addItemToDiv(id, ref, num) {
$("#miniList").load("/list/ajax_updateList.jsp", {
'action' : 'additem',
'pid' : id,
'pref' : ref,
'qty' : num
});
}
Of course, this works fine the first time the page is loaded, but when I add item to the list, DOM is update but mouseover effects don't work any more.
Any thoughts are more than welcomed.
For DOM elments added dynimically you need to use the jquery .live() function.
Please go through the below link, I think that might fix your problem:
api.jquery.com/live
#ishwebdev, this is common problem we run , for all the DOM elments added after pageload like run time, we need to bind the events through live instead of regular bind
If you are using jquery 1.4 use below code:
// from jquery.com
$('give your selector here').live('mouseover mouseout', function(event) {
if (event.type == 'mouseover') {
// do something on mouseover
} else {
// do something on mouseout
}
});
#siri: thanks for the excellent answer, it worked for me right away. Here's my shopping cart dropdown example:
Before:
$("#cart-items").mouseenter(function(){
$('#cart-pulldown').show();
});
After:
$("#cart-items").live('mouseenter', function(){
$('#cart-pulldown').show();
});
With .live the event handling still works even after I change the underlying HTML via an Ajax call.
The selected answer no longer works for jquery 1.9+.
Instead, use "on" event, like
$( document ).on("keyup", "input.assets",function(event) {...
http://api.jquery.com/on/
I have two divs, one that holds some stuff and the other with all possible stuff. Clicking on one of the divs will transfer items to the other div. The code I came up with is:
$("#holder > *").each(function() {
$(this).click(function(e) {
$(this).remove();
$("#bucket").append(this);
});
});
$("#bucket > *").each(function() {
$(this).click(function(e) {
$(this).remove();
$("#holder").append(this);
});
});
This one works perfectly, except that the event handlers need to be refreshed once I append or remove elements. What I mean is, if I first click on an element, it gets added to the other div, but if I click on this element again, nothing happens. I can do this manually but is there a better way to achieve this?
Try jquery live events .. the $.live(eventname, function) will bind to any current elements that match as well as elements added to the Dom in the future by javascript manipulation.
example:
$("#holder > *").live("click", function(e) {
$(this).remove();
$("#bucket").append(this);
});
$("#bucket > *").live("click", function(e) {
$(this).remove();
$("#holder").append(this);
});
Important:
Note that $.live has since been stripped from jQuery (1.9 onwards) and that you should instead use $.on.
I suggest that you refer to this answer for an updated example.
First, live is deprecated. Second, refreshing isn't what you want. You just need to attach the click handler to the right source, in this case: the document.
When you do
$(document).on('click', <id or class of element>, <function>);
the click handler is attached to the document. When the page is loaded, the click handler is attached to a specific instance of an element. When the page is reloaded, that specific instance is gone so the handler isn't going to register any clicks. But the page remains so attach the click handler to the document. Simple and easy.
Here you go, using the more intuitive delegate API:
var holder = $('#holder'),
bucket = $('#bucket');
holder.delegate('*', 'click', function(e) {
$(this).remove();
bucket.append(this);
});
bucket.delegate('*', 'click', function(e) {
$(this).remove();
holder.append(this);
});
EDIT: don't use live, it be deprecated!
Take advantage of the fact that events bubble. Using .on():
var = function( el1, el2 ) {
var things = $('#holder, #bucket');
things.each(function( index ) {
// for every click on or in this element
things.eq(index).on('click', '> *', function() {
// append will remove the element
// Number( !0 ) => 1, Number( !1 ) => 0
things.eq( Number(!index) ).append( this );
});
});
any click on any element (existing at the time of bind or not) will bubble up (assuming you haven't manually captured the event and stopped propagation). Thus, you can use that event delegation to bind only two events, one on each container. Every click that passed the selector test of the 2nd argument (in this case, > *, will remove that element and then append it to the alternate container as accesesed by things.eq( Number(!index) )
Have you looked at jQuery's live function?
The most Efficient way (dont load all event for all elements) it:
//NORMAL FUNCTION
function myfunction_click(){
//custom action
}
$('id_or_class_of_element').on('click', myfunction_click);
//LOAD OR REFRESH EVENT
$(document).on('click', 'id_or_class_of_element', myfunction_click);