I've got the following markup:
<div id="accordion" class="leftaligned">
<div>
<h3><a href="#">Stakeholder</a></h3>
<div>Content</div>
</div>
<div>
开发者_Go百科 <h3><a href="#">Relationships</a></h3>
<div>Blah blah</div>
</div>
<div>
<h3><a href="#">Address</a></h3>
<div>Yada yada</div>
</div>
<div>
<h3><a href="#">Contact Details</a></h3>
<div>Foo bar</div>
</div>
</div>
I create an accordion as follows:
$("#accordion").accordion({
header: "h3",
fillSpace: true,
changestart: function(event, ui) {
if (someConditionIsTrue()) {
event.stopPropagation();
event.preventDefault();
return (false);
}
}
});
The idea is that there are some use cases which would prevent the user from changing panes, however the above cancelling of the event has no effect and the panes can still be changed.
Is there a way to prevent the changing of panes? I also tried activating the current pane programmatically in order to prevent the change, but that fires another changestart event and all hell breaks loose (the accordion actually breaks)
$("#accordion .h3").unbind("click");
works for me.
Before initing accordion add your custom click handler with your logic. stopImmediatePropagation will stop event before accordion handler will be called.
$('.quiz-qa h3').click(function(e) {
if ($(this).hasClass("deleted")) {
e.stopImmediatePropagation();
return false;
}
});
$('.quiz-qa').accordion();
I filed an enhancement request for this: Ticket 6651.
I found a workaround which works in my context - I avoid having to cancel the event altogether by simply disabling the h3 headers (after giving them an id) when necessary:
html:
<div>
<h3 id="relationshipsHeader"><a href="#">Relationships</a></h3>
<div>Blah blah</div>
</div>
script:
if (someConditionIsTrue()) {
$("#relationshipsHeader").attr("disabled", "disabled");
// and so on...
}
It's a few years after the question was originally asked and I'm using jQuery-UI 1.11.2 so this might not have been a valid answer then.
But this is what I found to work the best:
- First give the header you want to disable the id
disable_this
, or find some other way you can select the relevant header(s). Then add this line of code
$('h3#disable_this').addClass('ui-state-disabled');
Some of the methods mentioned in earlier answers (unbind("click")
and e.stopImmediatePropogation()
) worked for me in the limited sense that they prevented the opening of the panel when the header was clicked. But my method has 2 additional benefits:
Stops the header taking on a highlighted style when clicked.
Gives the header a disabled style.
A lot more user-friendly.
I needed a derivation of this behavior because I was chaining draggable and accordion. I'm putting my solution here for anyone looking for the same solution.
The behavior I was trying to avoid was triggering an accordion change after dragging when the headers are the handle for both accordion and draggable. So, every time you drag, it collapses the content section currently expanded.
HTML:
var $container = ('<div id="accordion">');
var $content = ('<div>');
$content.append(
'<h1>Header 1</h1>' +
'<div>Content 1</div>' +
'<h1>Header 2</div>' +
'<div>Content 2</div>'
);
JS:
$container.append($controls)
.draggable({
handle: ':header',
start: function(event, ui) {
$(event.toElement).addClass('ui-dragging');
}
});
$container.find(':header').click(function (event) {
var $this = $(this);
if ($(this).hasClass('ui-dragging')) {
event.stopImmediatePropagation();
$this.removeClass('ui-dragging');
}
});
$container.accordion({
collapsible: true,
header: ':header'
});
I am creating the contents of accordion dynamically, so binding the event call before accordion is generated is not working for me. So I tried out binding the stopImmediatePropagation after accordion is created and that worked out for me.
$("#accordion h3").unbind("click");
Refer jsFiddle-accordion
Maybe it's available in older jQueryUIs but if you use jQuery-UI 1.9.2 or newer you can disable accordion collapsing in beforeActivate event;
beforeActivate: function (event, ui) {
event.preventDefault();
}
Although there is a similar answer by user438316, it has too much unnecessary code, return false
being a jarring obvious... how about just:
$('#accordion .deleted').click(function(e) {
e.stopImmediatePropagation();
});
$('#accordion').accordion();
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