Trigger code when custom event is being bound in jQuery - javascript

JQuery has great support for custom events - .bind("foo", function(e).... However what if the mechanic of triggering the event is not ready yet and has to be constructed only on those elements that have the event bound on?
For example I want a scrollin event that gets fired when an element is scrolled into a viewport. To do this, I would onscroll have to check all the elements and trigger scrollin on those that were outside the viewport and now are inside. This is not acceptable.
There are some tricks to speed it up. For example one of the plugins for this checks all the elements in "private" $.cache and does the checking only on those that have scrollin event bound.
But that's also ugly. What I need is an additional callback for the binding of the event (additional to the callback for handling) that would take care of the scroll management, that is to put the element(s) into some elementsCheckOnScrol cache array.
I'm looking for something like:
$.delegateBind("scrollin", function(jqSelection) { ... });
element.bind("scrollin", function(e) {..}); //Calls ^ after internal bind management
Edit: This would be nice api!
$.bind("bind", function(onWhat) { ... })
:-)

If I'm not misunderstanding you, you could patch the bind method like this:
(function($) {
var oldBind = $.fn.bind;
$.fn.bind = function(name) {
if(name === "scrollin") {
delegateFunction(this);
}
oldBind.apply(this, arguments);
};
})(jQuery);
What it does is checking whether a scrollin is being bound, and if so, calls your delegate function. After that it simply calls the original bind function which does all jQuery things like it does regularly.
After having added this code, you could use it like this: http://jsfiddle.net/pimvdb/g4k2G/.
function delegateFunction(selection) {
alert(selection.length);
}
$('a').bind('scrollin', function() {});
Note that this does not support object literals being passed to .bind (only (name, func)), but you could implement that as well.

I found an $.event.special API, but I don't know "how much" public it is. It is not in the docs and has been changed at least once before. http://benalman.com/news/2010/03/jquery-special-events/

Related

How to Get Event Listener of an Element

Is there any way to get the list of all event listeners of an element on the HTML page using JavaScript on that page.
Note: I know we can see them with Chrome dev tools event listeners but I want to log/access see list using the JavaScript of the page.
Also, I know we can get them through jQuery but for that, we also have to apply the events using jQuery, but I want something that would be generic so I could also access the event listeners applied to other elements such as web components or react components.
If you really had to, a general way to do this would be to patch EventTarget.prototype.addEventListener:
const listeners = [];
const orig = EventTarget.prototype.addEventListener;
EventTarget.prototype.addEventListener = function(...args) {
if (this instanceof HTMLElement) {
listeners.push({
type: args[0],
fn: args[1],
target: this,
});
}
return orig.apply(this, args);
};
document.body.addEventListener('click', () => console.log('body clicked'));
console.log(listeners[0].fn);
click this body
To find listeners attached to an element, iterate through the listeners array and look for targets which match the element you're looking for.
To be complete, also patch removeEventListener so that items can be removed from the array when removed.
If you need to watch for listeners attached via on, then you'll have to do something similar to the above to patch the HTMLElement.prototype.onclick getter/setter, and for each listener you want to be able to detect.
That said, although you said you want a generic solution, rather than patching built-in prototypes, it'd be better to add the listeners through jQuery or through your own function.
What I did when I had a similar problem is add a data attribute when the listener was set, so I could identify it later.
At the end of the function that adds the listener:
elm.setAttribute('data-has_mask', true);
At the beginning of that same function:
if("true" == elm.getAttribute('data-has_mask')) {
return;
}
Maybe not exactly what the OP is looking for, but I was having a lot of trouble with this, and this is an obvious solution for a particular use case, and I guess it might help someone out.

Prepend event listener [duplicate]

Lets say I have a web app which has a page that may contain 4 script blocks - the script I write may be found in one of those blocks, but I do not know which one, that is handled by the controller.
I bind some onclick events to a button, but I find that they sometimes execute in an order I did not expect.
Is there a way to ensure order, or how have you handled this problem in the past?
If order is important you can create your own events and bind callbacks to fire when those events are triggered by other callbacks.
$('#mydiv').click(function(e) {
// maniplate #mydiv ...
$('#mydiv').trigger('mydiv-manipulated');
});
$('#mydiv').bind('mydiv-manipulated', function(e) {
// do more stuff now that #mydiv has been manipulated
return;
});
Something like that at least.
Dowski's method is good if all of your callbacks are always going to be present and you are happy with them being dependant on each other.
If you want the callbacks to be independent of each other, though, you could be to take advantage of bubbling and attach subsequent events as delegates to parent elements. The handlers on a parent elements will be triggered after the handlers on the element, continuing right up to the document. This is quite good as you can use event.stopPropagation(), event.preventDefault(), etc to skip handlers and cancel or un-cancel the action.
$( '#mybutton' ).click( function(e) {
// Do stuff first
} );
$( '#mybutton' ).click( function(e) {
// Do other stuff first
} );
$( document ).delegate( '#mybutton', 'click', function(e) {
// Do stuff last
} );
Or, if you don't like this, you could use Nick Leaches bindLast plugin to force an event to be bound last: https://github.com/nickyleach/jQuery.bindLast.
Or, if you are using jQuery 1.5, you could also potentially do something clever with the new Deferred object.
I had been trying for ages to generalize this kind of process, but in my case I was only concerned with the order of first event listener in the chain.
If it's of any use, here is my jQuery plugin that binds an event listener that is always triggered before any others:
** UPDATED inline with jQuery changes (thanks Toskan) **
(function($) {
$.fn.bindFirst = function(/*String*/ eventType, /*[Object])*/ eventData, /*Function*/ handler) {
var indexOfDot = eventType.indexOf(".");
var eventNameSpace = indexOfDot > 0 ? eventType.substring(indexOfDot) : "";
eventType = indexOfDot > 0 ? eventType.substring(0, indexOfDot) : eventType;
handler = handler == undefined ? eventData : handler;
eventData = typeof eventData == "function" ? {} : eventData;
return this.each(function() {
var $this = $(this);
var currentAttrListener = this["on" + eventType];
if (currentAttrListener) {
$this.bind(eventType, function(e) {
return currentAttrListener(e.originalEvent);
});
this["on" + eventType] = null;
}
$this.bind(eventType + eventNameSpace, eventData, handler);
var allEvents = $this.data("events") || $._data($this[0], "events");
var typeEvents = allEvents[eventType];
var newEvent = typeEvents.pop();
typeEvents.unshift(newEvent);
});
};
})(jQuery);
Things to note:
This hasn't been fully tested.
It relies on the internals of the jQuery framework not changing (only tested with 1.5.2).
It will not necessarily get triggered before event listeners that are bound in any way other than as an attribute of the source element or using jQuery bind() and other associated functions.
The order the bound callbacks are called in is managed by each jQuery object's event data. There aren't any functions (that I know of) that allow you to view and manipulate that data directly, you can only use bind() and unbind() (or any of the equivalent helper functions).
Dowski's method is best, you should modify the various bound callbacks to bind to an ordered sequence of custom events, with the "first" callback bound to the "real" event. That way, no matter in what order they are bound, the sequence will execute in the right way.
The only alternative I can see is something you really, really don't want to contemplate: if you know the binding syntax of the functions may have been bound before you, attempt to un-bind all of those functions and then re-bind them in the proper order yourself. That's just asking for trouble, because now you have duplicated code.
It would be cool if jQuery allowed you to simply change the order of the bound events in an object's event data, but without writing some code to hook into the jQuery core that doesn't seem possible. And there are probably implications of allowing this that I haven't thought of, so maybe it's an intentional omission.
Please note that in the jQuery universe this must be implemented differently as of version 1.8. The following release note is from the jQuery blog:
.data(“events”): jQuery stores its event-related data in a data object
named (wait for it) events on each element. This is an internal data
structure so in 1.8 this will be removed from the user data name space
so it won’t conflict with items of the same name. jQuery’s event data
can still be accessed via jQuery._data(element, "events")
We do have complete control of the order in which the handlers will execute in the jQuery universe. Ricoo points this out above. Doesn't look like his answer earned him a lot of love, but this technique is very handy. Consider, for example, any time you need to execute your own handler prior to some handler in a library widget, or you need to have the power to cancel the call to the widget's handler conditionally:
$("button").click(function(e){
if(bSomeConditional)
e.stopImmediatePropagation();//Don't execute the widget's handler
}).each(function () {
var aClickListeners = $._data(this, "events").click;
aClickListeners.reverse();
});
function bindFirst(owner, event, handler) {
owner.unbind(event, handler);
owner.bind(event, handler);
var events = owner.data('events')[event];
events.unshift(events.pop());
owner.data('events')[event] = events;
}
just bind handler normally and then run:
element.data('events').action.reverse();
so for example:
$('#mydiv').data('events').click.reverse();
You can try something like this:
/**
* Guarantee that a event handler allways be the last to execute
* #param owner The jquery object with any others events handlers $(selector)
* #param event The event descriptor like 'click'
* #param handler The event handler to be executed allways at the end.
**/
function bindAtTheEnd(owner,event,handler){
var aux=function(){owner.unbind(event,handler);owner.bind(event,handler);};
bindAtTheStart(owner,event,aux,true);
}
/**
* Bind a event handler at the start of all others events handlers.
* #param owner Jquery object with any others events handlers $(selector);
* #param event The event descriptor for example 'click';
* #param handler The event handler to bind at the start.
* #param one If the function only be executed once.
**/
function bindAtTheStart(owner,event,handler,one){
var eventos,index;
var handlers=new Array();
owner.unbind(event,handler);
eventos=owner.data("events")[event];
for(index=0;index<eventos.length;index+=1){
handlers[index]=eventos[index];
}
owner.unbind(event);
if(one){
owner.one(event,handler);
}
else{
owner.bind(event,handler);
}
for(index=0;index<handlers.length;index+=1){
owner.bind(event,ownerhandlers[index]);
}
}
I have same issue and found this topic. the above answers can solve those problem, but I don't think them are good plans.
let us think about the real world.
if we use those answers, we have to change our code. you have to change your code style. something like this:
original:
$('form').submit(handle);
hack:
bindAtTheStart($('form'),'submit',handle);
as time goes on, think about your project. the code is ugly and hard to read! anthoer reason is simple is always better. if you have 10 bindAtTheStart, it may no bugs. if you have 100 bindAtTheStart, are you really sure you can keep them in right order?
so if you have to bind same events multiple.I think the best way is control js-file or js-code load order. jquery can handle event data as queue. the order is first-in, first-out. you don't need change any code. just change load order.
Here's my shot at this, covering different versions of jQuery:
// Binds a jQuery event to elements at the start of the event chain for that type.
jQuery.extend({
_bindEventHandlerAtStart: function ($elements, eventType, handler) {
var _data;
$elements.bind(eventType, handler);
// This bound the event, naturally, at the end of the event chain. We
// need it at the start.
if (typeof jQuery._data === 'function') {
// Since jQuery 1.8.1, it seems, that the events object isn't
// available through the public API `.data` method.
// Using `$._data, where it exists, seems to work.
_data = true;
}
$elements.each(function (index, element) {
var events;
if (_data) {
events = jQuery._data(element, 'events')[eventType];
} else {
events = jQuery(element).data('events')[eventType];
}
events.unshift(events.pop());
if (_data) {
jQuery._data(element, 'events')[eventType] = events;
} else {
jQuery(element).data('events')[eventType] = events;
}
});
}
});
In some special cases, when you cannot change how the click events are bound (event bindings are made from others' codes), and you can change the HTML element, here is a possible solution (warning: this is not the recommended way to bind events, other developers may murder you for this):
<span onclick="yourEventHandler(event)">Button</span>
With this way of binding, your event hander will be added first, so it will be executed first.
JQuery 1.5 introduces promises, and here's the simplest implementation I've seen to control order of execution. Full documentation at http://api.jquery.com/jquery.when/
$.when( $('#myDiv').css('background-color', 'red') )
.then( alert('hi!') )
.then( myClickFunction( $('#myID') ) )
.then( myThingToRunAfterClick() );

Only register a function with an event once?

I have a jQuery plugin that needs to register a click event handler:
$.fn.myPlugin = function (options) {
var settings = {
// snipped
};
$.extend(settings, options || {});
$("body").click(function () {
// Do Something
});
// Rest of the plugin
});
The problem is that multiple invocations register the function more than once. Since the function needs to stay attached, I can't use .one().
Is there a way if a function is already attached? Can I give it a name or so? Or do I have to set some boolean flag using closure magic?
Namespace your events.
$('body').unbind('click.myPlugin').bind('click.myPlugin', function() {
..code...
});
More on Namespaced Events.
A very easy method with good performance would be to set a data element on the body element:
if (!$.data(document.body, 'myPluginRegistered') {
$.data(document.body, 'myPluginRegistered', true);
// do your plugin code here
}
Easiest might be the boolean plus closure magic you suggested. Alternatively, you could get the list of all functions bound to "click" object, and see if the function you're attaching is there already.
This question shows how to get the list.
List all javascript events wired up on a page using jquery
Though, the namespace suggestion that came in after I first responded is probably simpler.

Is there an idiomatic way to listen for changes to the DOM using the Prototype library?

I'm trying to add a listener to DOM change events. I was hoping something as simple as 'dom:loaded' was baked into Prototype. I'm not sure of the 'Prototype-way' to handle this.
EDIT: I cannot control every case in which the DOM may be altered, so I can't get away with firing a custom event on every DOM change.
There is no standard handler to watch this. However, you can fire custom events in Prototype. Combined with Function.wrap, you should be able to do exactly what you need.
Essentially, you take any function that can modify the DOM, such as Element.insert(), and wrap it with a function that fires your change event:
Element.prototype.insert = Element.prototype.insert.wrap(
function(original) {
var ret = original.call(this, $A(arguments).slice(1));
document.fire('dom:changed');
}.bind(this)
);
Now, whenever you call Element.insert, it will fire 'dom:changed', which can be watched with Event.observe().
I can't guarantee what I just wrote is 100% perfect nor 100% versatile, but it should get you started.
I would recommend that you take a look at the documentation for Event.observe from the prototype documentation.
As an example using dom:loaded
document.observe("dom:loaded", function() {
// Some Javascript Code
});
And an example of Event.observe
$('step_anchor_' + i).observe('click', function(a, b){
return function(){pm.loadData(a, b, true)};
}(profile.steps[i].action, profile.steps[i].dao_id)
);
I should point out that obviously document also has an observe function that is specifically designed to listen for events on the entire document such as dom:loaded.
$(element).observe('click', function(event) { someFunction(event); } );
//someFunction will be called on the click event. This can be changed to any other event.
http://prototypejs.org/api
Go to Element to see more.
I think here is appropriate answer: Can javascript listen for "onDomChange" on every Dom elements? .
Check out DOMSubtreeModified, DOMNodeInserted etc.

How to order events bound with jQuery

Lets say I have a web app which has a page that may contain 4 script blocks - the script I write may be found in one of those blocks, but I do not know which one, that is handled by the controller.
I bind some onclick events to a button, but I find that they sometimes execute in an order I did not expect.
Is there a way to ensure order, or how have you handled this problem in the past?
If order is important you can create your own events and bind callbacks to fire when those events are triggered by other callbacks.
$('#mydiv').click(function(e) {
// maniplate #mydiv ...
$('#mydiv').trigger('mydiv-manipulated');
});
$('#mydiv').bind('mydiv-manipulated', function(e) {
// do more stuff now that #mydiv has been manipulated
return;
});
Something like that at least.
Dowski's method is good if all of your callbacks are always going to be present and you are happy with them being dependant on each other.
If you want the callbacks to be independent of each other, though, you could be to take advantage of bubbling and attach subsequent events as delegates to parent elements. The handlers on a parent elements will be triggered after the handlers on the element, continuing right up to the document. This is quite good as you can use event.stopPropagation(), event.preventDefault(), etc to skip handlers and cancel or un-cancel the action.
$( '#mybutton' ).click( function(e) {
// Do stuff first
} );
$( '#mybutton' ).click( function(e) {
// Do other stuff first
} );
$( document ).delegate( '#mybutton', 'click', function(e) {
// Do stuff last
} );
Or, if you don't like this, you could use Nick Leaches bindLast plugin to force an event to be bound last: https://github.com/nickyleach/jQuery.bindLast.
Or, if you are using jQuery 1.5, you could also potentially do something clever with the new Deferred object.
I had been trying for ages to generalize this kind of process, but in my case I was only concerned with the order of first event listener in the chain.
If it's of any use, here is my jQuery plugin that binds an event listener that is always triggered before any others:
** UPDATED inline with jQuery changes (thanks Toskan) **
(function($) {
$.fn.bindFirst = function(/*String*/ eventType, /*[Object])*/ eventData, /*Function*/ handler) {
var indexOfDot = eventType.indexOf(".");
var eventNameSpace = indexOfDot > 0 ? eventType.substring(indexOfDot) : "";
eventType = indexOfDot > 0 ? eventType.substring(0, indexOfDot) : eventType;
handler = handler == undefined ? eventData : handler;
eventData = typeof eventData == "function" ? {} : eventData;
return this.each(function() {
var $this = $(this);
var currentAttrListener = this["on" + eventType];
if (currentAttrListener) {
$this.bind(eventType, function(e) {
return currentAttrListener(e.originalEvent);
});
this["on" + eventType] = null;
}
$this.bind(eventType + eventNameSpace, eventData, handler);
var allEvents = $this.data("events") || $._data($this[0], "events");
var typeEvents = allEvents[eventType];
var newEvent = typeEvents.pop();
typeEvents.unshift(newEvent);
});
};
})(jQuery);
Things to note:
This hasn't been fully tested.
It relies on the internals of the jQuery framework not changing (only tested with 1.5.2).
It will not necessarily get triggered before event listeners that are bound in any way other than as an attribute of the source element or using jQuery bind() and other associated functions.
The order the bound callbacks are called in is managed by each jQuery object's event data. There aren't any functions (that I know of) that allow you to view and manipulate that data directly, you can only use bind() and unbind() (or any of the equivalent helper functions).
Dowski's method is best, you should modify the various bound callbacks to bind to an ordered sequence of custom events, with the "first" callback bound to the "real" event. That way, no matter in what order they are bound, the sequence will execute in the right way.
The only alternative I can see is something you really, really don't want to contemplate: if you know the binding syntax of the functions may have been bound before you, attempt to un-bind all of those functions and then re-bind them in the proper order yourself. That's just asking for trouble, because now you have duplicated code.
It would be cool if jQuery allowed you to simply change the order of the bound events in an object's event data, but without writing some code to hook into the jQuery core that doesn't seem possible. And there are probably implications of allowing this that I haven't thought of, so maybe it's an intentional omission.
Please note that in the jQuery universe this must be implemented differently as of version 1.8. The following release note is from the jQuery blog:
.data(“events”): jQuery stores its event-related data in a data object
named (wait for it) events on each element. This is an internal data
structure so in 1.8 this will be removed from the user data name space
so it won’t conflict with items of the same name. jQuery’s event data
can still be accessed via jQuery._data(element, "events")
We do have complete control of the order in which the handlers will execute in the jQuery universe. Ricoo points this out above. Doesn't look like his answer earned him a lot of love, but this technique is very handy. Consider, for example, any time you need to execute your own handler prior to some handler in a library widget, or you need to have the power to cancel the call to the widget's handler conditionally:
$("button").click(function(e){
if(bSomeConditional)
e.stopImmediatePropagation();//Don't execute the widget's handler
}).each(function () {
var aClickListeners = $._data(this, "events").click;
aClickListeners.reverse();
});
function bindFirst(owner, event, handler) {
owner.unbind(event, handler);
owner.bind(event, handler);
var events = owner.data('events')[event];
events.unshift(events.pop());
owner.data('events')[event] = events;
}
just bind handler normally and then run:
element.data('events').action.reverse();
so for example:
$('#mydiv').data('events').click.reverse();
You can try something like this:
/**
* Guarantee that a event handler allways be the last to execute
* #param owner The jquery object with any others events handlers $(selector)
* #param event The event descriptor like 'click'
* #param handler The event handler to be executed allways at the end.
**/
function bindAtTheEnd(owner,event,handler){
var aux=function(){owner.unbind(event,handler);owner.bind(event,handler);};
bindAtTheStart(owner,event,aux,true);
}
/**
* Bind a event handler at the start of all others events handlers.
* #param owner Jquery object with any others events handlers $(selector);
* #param event The event descriptor for example 'click';
* #param handler The event handler to bind at the start.
* #param one If the function only be executed once.
**/
function bindAtTheStart(owner,event,handler,one){
var eventos,index;
var handlers=new Array();
owner.unbind(event,handler);
eventos=owner.data("events")[event];
for(index=0;index<eventos.length;index+=1){
handlers[index]=eventos[index];
}
owner.unbind(event);
if(one){
owner.one(event,handler);
}
else{
owner.bind(event,handler);
}
for(index=0;index<handlers.length;index+=1){
owner.bind(event,ownerhandlers[index]);
}
}
I have same issue and found this topic. the above answers can solve those problem, but I don't think them are good plans.
let us think about the real world.
if we use those answers, we have to change our code. you have to change your code style. something like this:
original:
$('form').submit(handle);
hack:
bindAtTheStart($('form'),'submit',handle);
as time goes on, think about your project. the code is ugly and hard to read! anthoer reason is simple is always better. if you have 10 bindAtTheStart, it may no bugs. if you have 100 bindAtTheStart, are you really sure you can keep them in right order?
so if you have to bind same events multiple.I think the best way is control js-file or js-code load order. jquery can handle event data as queue. the order is first-in, first-out. you don't need change any code. just change load order.
Here's my shot at this, covering different versions of jQuery:
// Binds a jQuery event to elements at the start of the event chain for that type.
jQuery.extend({
_bindEventHandlerAtStart: function ($elements, eventType, handler) {
var _data;
$elements.bind(eventType, handler);
// This bound the event, naturally, at the end of the event chain. We
// need it at the start.
if (typeof jQuery._data === 'function') {
// Since jQuery 1.8.1, it seems, that the events object isn't
// available through the public API `.data` method.
// Using `$._data, where it exists, seems to work.
_data = true;
}
$elements.each(function (index, element) {
var events;
if (_data) {
events = jQuery._data(element, 'events')[eventType];
} else {
events = jQuery(element).data('events')[eventType];
}
events.unshift(events.pop());
if (_data) {
jQuery._data(element, 'events')[eventType] = events;
} else {
jQuery(element).data('events')[eventType] = events;
}
});
}
});
In some special cases, when you cannot change how the click events are bound (event bindings are made from others' codes), and you can change the HTML element, here is a possible solution (warning: this is not the recommended way to bind events, other developers may murder you for this):
<span onclick="yourEventHandler(event)">Button</span>
With this way of binding, your event hander will be added first, so it will be executed first.
JQuery 1.5 introduces promises, and here's the simplest implementation I've seen to control order of execution. Full documentation at http://api.jquery.com/jquery.when/
$.when( $('#myDiv').css('background-color', 'red') )
.then( alert('hi!') )
.then( myClickFunction( $('#myID') ) )
.then( myThingToRunAfterClick() );

Categories