I have a HTML table that displays rows of records and has a column on the end with a delete link. Each delete link has a class of confirm-delete. I need to have a confirm dialog popup on click and as it is used in multiple pages, have created a confirm fun开发者_运维百科ction in an external JS file.
I have added the function call to the link's click using jQuery [code at bottom of post] and it works fine until the dialog has been confirmed once [user has clicked OK]. Then the function is no longer called.
I think I am missing something pretty simple though as I don't use JS/jQuery much I may have a gap in my knowledge. Why does it work fine until the first OK? It appears to be storing a reference to the result and reusing it rather than a unique one for each link.
Here's the code when used on the Notes page:
$(function() {
// Add Confirmation dialogs for all Deletes
$("a.confirm-delete").click(function(event) {
return fConfirmDelete('Note');
});
});
And the fConfirmDelete function
function fConfirmDelete( deleteObj ) {
return confirm('Are you sure you wish to delete this ' + deleteObj + '?');
}
After the user clicks OK the first time, do you somehow reload the table dynamically? If so, it could be that the event isn't bound to the re-loaded table. Try a live event handler instead:
jQuery 1.7+
$(function() {
// Add Confirmation dialogs for all Deletes
$(document).on('click', 'a.confirm-delete', function(event) {
return fConfirmDelete('Note');
});
});
jQuery 1.3-1.8:
$(function() {
// Add Confirmation dialogs for all Deletes
$("a.confirm-delete").live('click', function(event) {
return fConfirmDelete('Note');
});
});
In your original code, $("a.confirm-delete").click(...)
will only bind the event to a.confirm-delete
objects already in the DOM. If you add a new a.confirm-delete
element later, the event is not bound to it. By using jQuery's live event handler, the event will be bound to any a.confirm-delete
elements that currently exist or any that get created dynamically.
@bradenkeith is probably correct with his answer but you might want to leverage jQuery a little more and do a jQuery dialog as well.
$("a.confirm-delete").click(function(event) {
var message = fConfirmDelete(deleteObj);
var $dialog = $j('<div></div>')
.html(message)
.dialog({
autoOpen: true,
bgiframe: true,
buttons: {
'Dismiss': function() { $j(this).dialog('close');}
'Delete': function() { //Do delete things }
}
modal: true
// other parameters here
});
});
Something like that might be easier to read and maintain in my opinion.
Just an option. :)
$(function() {
// Add Confirmation dialogs for all Deletes
$("a.confirm-delete").click(function(event) {
if(fConfirmDelete('Note')){
return true;
}else{
return false;
}
});
});
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