I am trying to use mootools ajax requests to record clicks on outgoing links. So far here is what I'm doing.
Each link looks like follows:
<div id="1">
StackOverflow
</div>
The javascript function clickRecord(id) is defined as follows:
function clickRecord(id){
var u = "record.php";
var req = new Request({
method: 'post',
url: u,
data:{'id':id},
onComplete:function(response){
}
}).send();
}
The problem I have is this. If I add a return false; to the onclick="" declaration, everything works fine, of course the problem there is that click does not take the user to the intended page. If I do not have the return false; then it seems like the ajax call is never executed.
I thought the onclick event should execute first and then only the default action should execute. Is this not the case?
There is an even stranger scenario if you use onmousedown event instead. It seems like on Firefox, if you use the onmousedown event, once you go to the new page, you cant simply navigate back to the old page, you have to refresh the old page. Else the call is not executed. This does not happen on IE.
Don't use onclick - very 1995.
Instead attach an event to the element and use event.stop(), ie:
StackOverflow
JS:
document.getElements('a').addEvents({
click: function(event) {
event.stop();
var u = 'record.php';
var req = new Request({
method: 'post',
url: u,
data: {
'id': this.get('data-id');
},
onComplete: function(response) {}
}).send();
}
});
Btw. <div id="1"> this is not valid in HTML, an ID'd needs to start with a letter.
OK. Found an answer to one of the questions:
The inline mootools request did not execute when declared through the onclick().
It seems this was caused by the script not being synchronous. So probably it returns without actually fully committing the request, and the browser then moves to another page breaking the execution. Adding a synchronous call to the script fixes the problem:
function clickRecord(id){
var u = "record.php";
var req = new Request({
async:false,
method: 'post',
url: u,
data:{'id':id},
onComplete:function(response){
}
}).send();
}
The second problem that was mentioned on the onmousedownevent, i.e. firefox not executing the ajax call if the browser navigates back is still unsolved. However I am leaving that to be as that wasn't the main question raised.
Related
I am using jQuery Address plugin, and all my ajax navigation is based on it, and more precisely on internalChange or externalChange events like that
$(document).ready(function() {
initDeepLinking();
});
function linkClicked(e){
var request = $.ajax({
url: e.path,
data: e.queryString,
type: "GET",
dataType: "json",
});
request.done(handleResponse);
return false;
}
function handleResponse(response, textStatus, jqXHR){
$('#main').html(response.responseText);
};
function initDeepLinking(){
$.address.internalChange(function(event){
linkClicked(event);
});
$.address.externalChange(function(event){
linkClicked(event);
});
}
so when i click on a link leading to the current page, nothing happens.
I would like the page to reload when I do that. Any simple options ?
Thanks !
I am having troubles understanding what your question really is:
you don't know how to attach a handler to the link
you don't know what statement can be used to refresh the current page
In order to set a handler you can use some selector. For example, getting the element by class. More about jquery selectors here.
After you have the element, you can attach an event handler for the 'on click' event and do something like this:
window.location.reload(true);
Well this has me well and truly stumped. After searching for the last few hours I still cannot seem to work out where I am going wrong.
I am trying to append an AJAX response to a container when it gets clicked. That works fine but I don't want it to append another object when the elements from the AJAX response also gets clicked.... so:
<div id="container">
<!-- AJAX response to get inserted here, for example -->
<span id="ajaxResponse"></span>
</div>
Here is my script:
$('#container').click(function(e) {
var current_el = $(this).get(0);
$.ajax({
url: 'text.html',
success: function(data) {
$(current_el).append(data);
}
});
return false;
});
So it works fine but for some reason the click event on #container also fires when I click on the AJAX response span!?
According to jQuery documentation:
To stop further handlers from
executing after one bound using
.live(), the handler must return
false. Calling .stopPropagation() will
not accomplish this.
But unless I am mistaken, I am calling false? :(
Anyone help me out on this?
UPDATED:
So the only way I can get it to work is by updating my code to this:
$('#container').live('click', function() {
var current_el = $(this).get(0);
$.ajax({
url: 'text.html',
success: function(data) {
$(current_el).append(data);
}
});
});
$('#ajaxResponse').live('click', function(e) {
return false;
});
This seems a little messy though... anyone have a better solution?
Where is live part you mention in the title of the question ?
It is how the event model works.. If you click on element which does not handle the event, the event will travel up the DOM hierarchy until it finds an element that handles the click (and stops its propagation..). Otherwise you would not be able to put an image inside a <a> tag and click on it..
You can bind a canceling handler on the inner element assuming you have someway to target it..
$.ajax({
url: 'text.html',
success: function(data) {
$(current_el).append(data);
// assuming the returned data from ajax are wrapped in tags
$(current_el).children().click(function(){ return false;});
}
});
I think the return false is referring to something else in this case...
you should try calling stopPropagation() - this should stop the "click" function from propagating down to the ajaxResponse span....
One option that you may want to try is switching over to using live(). Essentially, the click event you setup is calling bind(), and the solution you referenced is using live() which is a variation on bind().
For example:
$('#container').live("click", function(e) {
var current_el = $(this).get(0);
$.ajax({
url: 'text.html',
success: function(data) {
$(current_el).append(data);
}
});
return false;
});
HTH
This is a mock of what I'm doing:
function loadPage(pn) {
$('#'+pn).live('pagecreate',function(event, ui){
$('#'+pn+'-submit').click( function() {
$.mobile.changePage({
url: 'page.php?parm=value',
type: 'post',
data: $('form#'+pn+'_form')
},'slide',false,false);
loadAjaxPages(pn);
});
});
function loadAjaxPages(page) {
// this returns the page I want, all is working
$.ajax({
url: 'page.php?parm=value',
type: 'POST',
error : function (){ document.title='error'; },
success: function (data) {
$('#display_'+page+'_page').html(data); // removed .page(), causing page to transition, but if I use .page() I can see the desired listview
}
});
}
in the ajax call return if I add the .page() (which worked in the past but I had it out side of the page function, changing the logic on how I load pages to save on loading times), make the page transition to the next page but I can see the listview is styled the way I want:
$('#display_'+page+'_page').html(data).page();
Removing .page() fixes the transition error but now the page does not style. I have tried listview('refresh') and even listview('refresh',true) but no luck.
Any thoughts on how I can get the listview to refresh?
Solution:
$.ajax({
url: 'page.php?parm=value',
type: 'POST',
error : function (){ document.title='error'; },
success: function (data) {
$('#display_'+page+'_page').html(data);
$("div#name ul").listview(); // add div wrapper w/ name attr to use the refresh
}
});
Be sure to call .listview on the ul element
If it didn't style earlier, you just call .listview(), bot the refresh function. If your firebug setup is correct, you should have seen an error message telling you that.
I didn't have time to get down to creating some code before you posted your fix, but here's a little recommendation from me:
if(data !== null){ $('#display_'+page+'_page').html(data).find("ul").listview() }
This is a bit nicer than a new global selector. Also - you don't need the div and you can provide a detailed selector if you have multiple ULs.
caution: the above code requires data !== null. If it's null - it will throw an error.
If you add items to a listview, you'll need to call the refresh() method on it to update the styles and create any nested lists that are added. For example:
$('#mylist').listview('refresh');
Note that the refresh() method only affects new nodes appended to a list. This is done for performance reasons. Any list items already enhanced will be ignored by the refresh process. This means that if you change the contents or attributes on an already enhanced list item, these won't be reflected. If you want a list item to be updated, replace it with fresh markup before calling refresh.
more info here.
I'm trying to do an ajax post after a button is clicked, and it works in firefox but not in IE the first time the page is loaded. It does work if I refresh the page and try again second time - but not first time and this is crucial.
I've scanned over various web pages - could it be anything to do with the listener? (I've just seen this mentioned mentiond somewhere) Is there something not set correctly to do with ajax and posting when page first loads?
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#btnCont').bind('click',function () {
var itm = $("#txtItm").val();
var qty = $("#txtQty").val();
var msg = $("#txtMessage").val();
var op_id = $("#txtOp_id").val();
//if i alert these values out they alert out no prob
alert(itm+'-'+qty+'-'+msg+'-'+op_id);
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "do_request.php?msg="+msg+"&itm="+itm+"&qty="+qty+"&op_id="+op_id,
success: function (msg) {
document.getElementById('div_main').style.display='none';
document.getElementById('div_success').style.display='block';
var row_id = document.getElementById('txtRow').value;
document.getElementById('row'+row_id).style.backgroundColor='#b4e8aa';
},
error: function (XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert('Error submitting request.');
}
});
});
I would start debugging the click event. I.e. if you try to put .bind into a a href tag, the tag itself has a click event that may act on an unwanted way. There exist a command that are named something like event.preventDefaults() that avoids the standard feature of click. After All, you try to manipulate the DOM last of all actions (document.load).
$('#btnCont').bind('click',function () { .. }
I would also try to debug the same functionality with adding onClientClick to the tag instead of adding bind to the document load.
I hope that bring some light.
I have a jQuery application, a shopping cart, that posts back info to the server, if the text inputfield is changed. This is done in an Ajax request. Now, if the Ajaxrequest is a success, I want to reload the shoppingcart asynchronously. The code is as follows:
$(document).ready(function() {
var jInput = $(":input");
jInput.change(function() {
var vareAntal = $(this).val();
var vareID = $(this).siblings("input#vareID").val();
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: 'checkout.aspx',
data: { 'ID': vareID, 'Antal': vareAntal },
success: function() {
$("#newbasket").load(location.href + " #newbasket>*", "");
}
});
});
});
This works, but only once! If I change the text inputfield, after the page is loaded for the first time, the div with the ID of newbasket reloads asynchronously. But if I try to change it again, nothing happens.
I've tried to do some debugging with Firebug, and the first time I change the text inputfield, it fires a POST-event, and afterwards a GET-event, when the POST-event is succesful. But after that, nothing happens when I change the text inputfield again.
So, how do I achieve triggering the .load() method after each text input change?
I've also tried experimenting with the .ajaxComplete() function, but that, of course, resulted in an infinite loop, since the .load() is an ajax-object.
Instead of .change(func), use .live('change', func) here, like this:
jInput.live('change', function() {
This will make the selector work on any new inputs added as well. When you're replacing the elements like you are currently, their event handlers are lost (or rather, not re-created, because you have new elements). .live() is just for this purpose, it listens for events from old and new elements, regardless of when they were added.