I\'d like to change the value of the onclick
attribute on an anchor. I want to set it to a new string that contains JavaScript. (That string is provided to the
One gotcha with Jquery is that the click function do not acknowledge the hand coded onclick from the html.
So, you pretty much have to choose. Set up all your handlers in the init function or all of them in html.
The click event in JQuery is the click function $("myelt").click (function ....).
You shouldn't be using onClick
any more if you are using jQuery. jQuery provides its own methods of attaching and binding events. See .click()
$(document).ready(function(){
var js = "alert('B:' + this.id); return false;";
// create a function from the "js" string
var newclick = new Function(js);
// clears onclick then sets click using jQuery
$("#anchor").attr('onclick', '').click(newclick);
});
That should cancel the onClick
function - and keep your "javascript from a string" as well.
The best thing to do would be to remove the onclick=""
from the <a>
element in the HTML code and switch to using the Unobtrusive method of binding an event to click.
You also said:
Using
onclick = function() { return eval(js); }
doesn't work because you are not allowed to use return in code passed to eval().
No - it won't, but onclick = eval("(function(){"+js+"})");
will wrap the 'js' variable in a function enclosure. onclick = new Function(js);
works as well and is a little cleaner to read. (note the capital F) -- see documentation on Function() constructors
BTW, without JQuery this could also be done, but obviously it's pretty ugly as it only considers IE/non-IE:
if(isie)
tmpobject.setAttribute('onclick',(new Function(tmp.nextSibling.getAttributeNode('onclick').value)));
else
$(tmpobject).attr('onclick',tmp.nextSibling.attributes[0].value); //this even supposes index
Anyway, just so that people have an overall idea of what can be done, as I'm sure many have stumbled upon this annoyance.
Came up with a quick and dirty fix to this. Just used <select onchange='this.options[this.selectedIndex].onclick();> <option onclick='alert("hello world")' ></option> </select>
Hope this helps
If you don't want to actually navigate to a new page you can also have your anchor somewhere on the page like this.
<a id="the_anchor" href="">
And then to assign your string of JavaScript to the the onclick of the anchor, put this somewhere else (i.e. the header, later in the body, whatever):
<script>
var js = "alert('I am your string of JavaScript');"; // js is your string of script
document.getElementById('the_anchor').href = 'javascript:' + js;
</script>
If you have all of this info on the server before sending out the page, then you could also simply place the JavaScript directly in the href
attribute of the anchor like so:
<a href="javascript:alert('I am your script.'); alert('So am I.');">Click me</a>
just use jQuery bind method !jquery-selector!.bind('event', !fn!);
See here for more about events in jQuery