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22:00
still nothing. This is what I get in the address bar mysite.com/home?v1=test&0v=0&v2=test&v3=message
@mick_smick again no live with submit.
But I think I have to use live(...). Here's what happens.
I click a button that opens a modal window and loads the content with ajax. The content has the form to submit. If I don't use live, then the form will never get sent. Am I right?
user1385191
hm, I think it's a good idea if we pin the FAQ
@mick, you can set the submit handler in the ajax to activate after the form gets dropped in.
22:03
@mick_smick newClass is not defined
user1385191
user1385191
(need a star to pin it)
@mick does that simplified version not work in IE8? That would surprise me.
@MattMcDonald ur an owner, u can pin it
That is, if it works in other browsers.
22:06
@Neal Give me a few secs to test it
@mick_smick kk
@Neal I get an error in Internet Explorer 'undefined' is null or not an object on the line with e.preventDefault();
make sure you have e in your function
@mick_smick $("input[value='send']").live("click", function(e) {
I do
$("input[value='send']").live(
"click",function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
well idk lol
22:19
@micksmick try not using live at all. Just apply the click event handler after you attach the form HTML in the ajax success property.
How can I apply the click even handler after I attach the form HTML?
$("input[value='send']").click( function(e) {//etc... } );
And put an id on that submit if you can. Faster to select via ID.
I've got a lot of those forms on the website. And to make things work, I'd have to put a different ID on each form, right?
That's why I said 'if you can'
If you don't have to worry about anything less than IE8 a class would be fine.
The CSS-looking stuff is going to tend to be faster than the by-attribute xpath-style stuff.
What do you mean by IE8 class?
user1385191
22:26
fyi: selecting by value is a bad idea
user1385191
use a name or id attribute
HTML class.
When I change $(".submitF").live("submit",function() { ... into $(".submitF").submit(function() { IE8 works fine
user1385191
classes make for complex selection and traversal
but then those ajax generated forms don't get sent
user1385191
22:27
ids and names are easily fetched via some HTMLCollections
That's fine. I was looking at code with a click on the button at one point.
Because you're on fiddler and the URL is just a relative path. So JQuery sticks it to the path you're at. You have to send to the actual address of whatever server you're getting those forms from.
Could you tell me where I can find information on HTML classes? I have little idea of what you're telling me to do :)
<form class=""
user1385191
<div class="foo bar baz"> (classes of "foo", "bar", and "baz")
oh THAT class :)
22:30
Accessible by CSS (which JQuery imitates) like so: '.foo'
I guess I'm a little bit tired. I've been trying to find the solution for a long time.
And I'm not on fiddler. I'm testing everything on my website
Changing the code and testing :)
It's not rocket science but there's a lot to know. Getting over that wall takes a while.
Ok. So I guess. I'll have to settle for submit with live(...) in this case.
And if you're not tired with me, could you take a look at another one?
Find the point that the form gets dropped in. In a function somewhere, I assume. After that, wrap whatever you want to happen in here:$('.submitF').submit(function(){ /* insert here */ }
works everywhere but Internet Explorer 8 :) (Why am I not surprised?)
22:36
How is everyone?
@micksmick - loads and loads of people bitching about live and IE8 if you google appropriate keywords. You have to make do without live.
But the thing is that if I have the ajax generated function it won't trigger ajax without live(...), will it?
hey
user1385191
the point I was trying to make is selecting by class makes traversal difficult
Once you insert HTML into the document, you can hit it with event handlers.
I just don't understand why people still use IE.
user1385191
22:37
because it's built into windows
user1385191
no need to install anything
user1385191
just like safari on OS X
There's a problem with css, jquery and you have to waste so much time trying to make things work there
at least everything works in safari
user1385191
believe it or not, once you research IE enough, the quirks tend to disappear (by writing better code)
My dad's an engineer and I couldn't get him to stop using IE6. Made me crazy. He was the first guy in his office to learn everything about computers and now I can't get him to stop using old browsers.
Live is the only thing in JQuery I would be wary of working well in older versions of IE.
22:40
Something I will never get. I use all the browsers. Chrome if I want to get something fast, Firefox if I want to check the code (Firebug), Safari to use the READER function in newspapers, and Opera because I just love it :)
Ok, guys. Thanks for your help. But I need to hit the hay as it's almost 1 AM here in Poland
$.ajax({ url:foo, success:function(){ loadFormInHTML(); nowDoSubmitHandler(); } })
^That's the general idea. HTML in. Then hit it with event handlers.
Gosh. That looks like Chinese to me.
But thanks for that. I'll save it and try to do some research on it as I have no idea what it does :)
object literals are where it gets weird for newer JS folks.
Look up what these do by themselves in JS {}
Object literal. Like an associative array.
user1385191
not quite
user1385191
keys are string-only
user1385191
22:44
they're unordered
Which is why I said 'like'
Rather than 100% identical to.
semantics :D
JS gets arrays and object literals for list-like data structures. For some reason people are slow to catch on to object literals.
user1385191
sadly, there's still a large contingent that fret about objects being unordered data
JS, not JQ.
22:46
even more Chinese :0
user1385191
so the word "array" can throw you off when likening to an associative array
Thanks again. Gotta dash. But I'll probably be back.
Night night
The whole point is that they're unordered. When you want order, you use an array. When you want reference by name, you use a literal object.
Good luck.
Hey all, I hover my mouse of table row, and the table row is clickable and I think that is overshadowing the link underneath it. But I inspected style of table row and there's no cursor css style applied to it. Can something else be at play?
links change cursor styles by default, but not if there's no href attribute. Not sure if that's relevant.
22:49
WHen I hover over the row, a cursor appears
how is that possible?
What's in the row. What are you using. What do you mean by clickable? Everything is clickable.
basically I have a link with an id, but it doesnt have an href. I want to make the link clickable via javascript using the id. However, when I click on link nothing happens. I noticed that the entire row of the table has a mouse hover effect when you hover over a row of table. But when you click the row itself nothing happens.
typically table rows dont have mouse hover effects, so I assume some css rule is applied. But I cannot figure out what kind of css rule would cause this.
actually I am wrong its not table causing this
Sounds like a CSS problem. I would look at z-index.
<a class="myButton" id="activate_unit">Activate Unit</a> $("#activate_unit").click(function(){
alert("Hey there");
})
any reason why that click event wont be triggered when I click on that link?
user1385191
give it a valid href, return false upon clicking
22:58
Surprised if that matters but yeah, I tend to use href="javascript:;" as my dummy href.
I assume the jquery stuff isn't right after the anchor tag in the HTML like that.
user1385191
the javascript pseudo-protocol is best avoided
user1385191
> The javascript: pseudo protocol creates accessibility and usability problems. It provides no fallback for when the script is not supported. Instead, use <a href="something.html" onclick="somefunction();return false"> where something.html is a meaningful alternative. Alternatively, attach the click callback using an event registry.
user1385191
better yet: <a href="#foo" id="foo">something</a>
thanks for responses
If you're not going the prog enhancement route, I prefer javascript:; but yes, progressive enhancement is ideal.
Did that fix it?
23:17
I just found perhaps the most useful image on the whole Internet.
It's like when I was looking at the source of EXTjs. Only I have coworkers so the rage was more bitchy and loud and constant and punctuated by screaming fits.
user1385191
NO, someone upvoted you
@MattMcDonald I know, right?
I starred it.
user1385191
210
A: How does "Reputation" work?

Justin StandardWhat does Reputation do? As a registered user, your reputation on the site is a part of your identity on the site. It determines, to an extent, your familiarity with the site, the amount of subject matter expertise you have and the level of respect your peers have for you. It can generally only ...

23:25
Man he definitely needed that beard. That's not a pretty mug.
user1385191
oh, man
user1385191
I forgot about bounties
user1385191
that's an easy way to dump the exces rep
Hello again.
Just came to tell you that I've found the solution to my problem.
I downloaded the latest jquery 1.6.4 and there is no problem whatsover with live and submit
but I do appreciate the fact that you all wanted to help me
@MattMcDonald yeah but I think the minimum bounty is 50 or whatever
23:43
Ah... older JQ. Should of thought of that.
If you still here micksmick, look up 'delegate'
Works the same way. Smarter approach.
delegate instead of live?
by the way, new JQ also fixed this one jsfiddle.net/rDySA
morning all
@david mornin'

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