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I have defined a Marionette View, and I need to reflect the model change event. I have my initialize function like so:
initialize: function(){
_.bindAll(this,"render");
this.model.on('change',this.render);
},
Later, I have defined my jquery-ui element initializers in onDomRefresh method. It is a draggable and resizable element, which can be writeable when you click on it. When clicking outside the element, the text is saved.
onDomRefresh: function(){
var self = this;
if(this.$el.resizable()){
this.$el.resizable('destroy');
}
this.$el.resizable({ handles: "n, e, s, w, se, sw, nw, ne" });
this.$el.on('resize', function (e) {
e.stopPropagation();
});
this.$el.draggable().click(function(e){
$(".selected").removeClass("selected");
$(this).addClass("selected");
$(this).draggable( "option", "disabled", true );
$(this).attr('contenteditable','true');
$(this).css({cursor:'text'});
$(this).css({opacity:'100'});
}).blur(function(){
$(this).draggable( 'option', 'disabled', false);
$(this).attr('contenteditable','false');
$(this).css({cursor:'move'});
self.textchange(); //update and save the text in the model
});
}
The problem comes, when the model has nested some model change events, and the click function is firing more and more times. I have been looking for jquery click event solutions, and none of them seems to work for me.
Tried solutions:
this.$el.draggable().unbind("click").click(function(e){});
this.$el.draggable().off("click").on('click',function(e){});
this.$el.draggable().one('click', function(e){});
//with jquery sparkle
this.$el.draggable().once('click', function(e){});
I also notice that sometimes onDomRefresh method fires two times. Don't know how to fix that. Any ideas are more than welcomed.
I have added this call at the beggining of onDomRefresh() function, which unbinds all the events on the element:
this.$el.unbind();
Now, the click event fires just once after rerendering the view.
I tested on the Apple device, and when I click on the screen when there is no effect. This is my code. Click on the events of this writing there are questions?
<script>
$(function() {
$('#test').tap(function() {
$('#menuNum').text('1');
})
})
</script>
You need to change few things.
Do not use $(function() { or classic document ready to check for a correct state, they can cause problems with jQuery Mobile. Instead use jQuery Mobile alternative called page events.
Then don't bind tap event like that, use proper modern way of doing that. In your case element must be loaded into the DOM for that kind of binding to work. And because of $(function() { sometimes it can happen that element is still loading when binding is executed. So use it like this:
$(document).on('tap','#test',function() {
$('#menuNum').text('1');
});
This method don't care if element exist or not, it will even work if element is loaded into the DOM after binding process.
Working example: http://jsfiddle.net/Gajotres/SQ7DF/
In the end you want something like this:
$(document).on('pagebeforeshow', '#index', function(){
$(document).on('tap','#test',function() {
alert('Tap');
});
});
My scenario is I have a list of items that are draggable but not sortable and another list that is sortable. What I want to achieve is to drag from the draggable into the sortable but when I drop the item into the sortable I want to make an ajax request and depending on the answer to insert the item into the sortable or not.
I tried to use on beforeStop or receive events for the sortable to cancel the item being added to the sortable but didn't find a solution.
I made a jsfiddle here http://jsfiddle.net/5pTCd/21/
Why not using your draggable/droppable in an accept/revert setting?
Here is a theoretical way to accomplish an accept/revert drag & drop :
First you need to set your draggable to revert if it is not accepted:
$(".drag").draggable({ revert: 'invalid' });
Then of course you could define what is valid in your droppable :
$(".drop").droppable({ accept: '.drag' });
But thanks to the magic powder included in jQuery UI, you can insert a function as a value for "accept", it's returned value will define what you accept as a valid element:
$(".drop").droppable( { accept: function() {
// return true or false
} });
As an alternative you can use the dragstart event to change the accept option of your droppable :
$(".drag").draggable({
start: function() {
// your ajax call and then a callback with :
$(".drop").droppable("option","accept","#thisItemsID") }
});
How do you trigger jQuery UI's AutoComplete change event handler programmatically?
Hookup
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
source: context.companies,
change: handleCompanyChanged
});
Misc Attempts Thus Far
$("#CompanyList").change();
$("#CompanyList").trigger("change");
$("#CompanyList").triggerHandler("change");
Based on other answers it should work:
How to trigger jQuery change event in code
jQuery Autocomplete and on change Problem
JQuery Autocomplete help
The change event fires as expected when I manually interact with the AutoComplete input via browser; however I would like to programmatically trigger the change event in some cases.
What am I missing?
Here you go. It's a little messy but it works.
$(function () {
var companyList = $("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
change: function() {
alert('changed');
}
});
companyList.autocomplete('option','change').call(companyList);
});
this will work,too
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
source : yourSource,
change : yourChangeHandler
})
// deprecated
//$("#CompanyList").data("autocomplete")._trigger("change")
// use this now
$("#CompanyList").data("ui-autocomplete")._trigger("change")
It's better to use the select event instead. The change event is bound to keydown as Wil said. So if you want to listen to change on selection use select like that.
$("#yourcomponent").autocomplete({
select: function(event, ui) {
console.log(ui);
}
});
They are binding to keydown in the autocomplete source, so triggering the keydown will case it to update.
$("#CompanyList").trigger('keydown');
They aren't binding to the 'change' event because that only triggers at the DOM level when the form field loses focus. The autocomplete needs to respond faster than 'lost focus' so it has to bind to a key event.
Doing this:
companyList.autocomplete('option','change').call(companyList);
Will cause a bug if the user retypes the exact option that was there before.
Here is a relatively clean solution for others looking up this topic:
// run when eventlistener is triggered
$("#CompanyList").on( "autocompletechange", function(event,ui) {
// post value to console for validation
console.log($(this).val());
});
Per api.jqueryui.com/autocomplete/, this binds a function to the eventlistener. It is triggered both when the user selects a value from the autocomplete list and when they manually type in a value. The trigger fires when the field loses focus.
The simplest, most robust way is to use the internal ._trigger() to fire the autocomplete change event.
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
source : yourSource,
change : yourChangeHandler
})
$("#CompanyList").data("ui-autocomplete")._trigger("change");
Note, jQuery UI 1.9 changed from .data("autocomplete") to .data("ui-autocomplete"). You may also see some people using .data("uiAutocomplete") which indeed works in 1.9 and 1.10, but "ui-autocomplete" is the official preferred form. See http://jqueryui.com/upgrade-guide/1.9/#changed-naming-convention-for-data-keys for jQuery UI namespaecing on data keys.
You have to manually bind the event, rather than supply it as a property of the initialization object, to make it available to trigger.
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
source: context.companies
}).bind( 'autocompletechange', handleCompanyChanged );
then
$("#CompanyList").trigger("autocompletechange");
It's a bit of a workaround, but I'm in favor of workarounds that improve the semantic uniformity of the library!
The programmatically trigger to call the autocomplete.change event is via a namespaced trigger on the source select element.
$("#CompanyList").trigger("blur.autocomplete");
Within version 1.8 of jquery UI..
.bind( "blur.autocomplete", function( event ) {
if ( self.options.disabled ) {
return;
}
clearTimeout( self.searching );
// clicks on the menu (or a button to trigger a search) will cause a blur event
self.closing = setTimeout(function() {
self.close( event );
self._change( event );
}, 150 );
});
I was trying to do the same, but without keeping a variable of autocomplete. I walk throught this calling change handler programatically on the select event, you only need to worry about the actual value of input.
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete({
source: context.companies,
change: handleCompanyChanged,
select: function(event,ui){
$("#CompanyList").trigger('blur');
$("#CompanyList").val(ui.item.value);
handleCompanyChanged();
}
});
Well it works for me just binding a keypress event to the search input, like this:
... Instantiate your autofill here...
$("#CompanyList").bind("keypress", function(){
if (nowDoing==1) {
nowDoing = 0;
$('#form_459174').clearForm();
}
});
$('#search').autocomplete( { source: items } );
$('#search:focus').autocomplete('search', $('#search').val() );
This seems to be the only one that worked for me.
This post is pretty old, but for thoses who got here in 2016. None of the example here worked for me. Using keyup instead of autocompletechange did the job. Using jquery-ui 10.4
$("#CompanyList").on("keyup", function (event, ui) {
console.log($(this).val());
});
Hope this help!
Another solution than the previous ones:
//With trigger
$("#CompanyList").trigger("keydown");
//With the autocomplete API
$("#CompanyList").autocomplete("search");
jQuery UI Autocomplete API
https://jsfiddle.net/mwneepop/
I've searched everywhere, but I can't seem to find any help...
I have some textboxes that are created dynamically via JS, so I need to bind all of their classes to an autocomplete. As a result, I need to use the new .live() option.
As an example, to bind all items with a class of .foo now and future created:
$('.foo').live('click', function(){
alert('clicked');
});
It takes (and behaves) the same as .bind(). However, I want to bind an autocomplete...
This doesn't work:
$('.foo').live('autocomplete', function(event, ui){
source: 'url.php' // (surpressed other arguments)
});
How can I use .live() to bind autocomplete?
UPDATE
Figured it out with Framer:
$(function(){
$('.search').live('keyup.autocomplete', function(){
$(this).autocomplete({
source : 'url.php'
});
});
});
jQuery UI autocomplete function automatically adds the class "ui-autocomplete-input" to the element. I'd recommend live binding the element on focus without the "ui-autocomplete-input"
class to prevent re-binding on every keydown event within that element.
$(".foo:not(.ui-autocomplete-input)").live("focus", function (event) {
$(this).autocomplete(options);
});
Edit
My answer is now out of date since jQuery 1.7, see Nathan Strutz's comment for use with the new .on() syntax.
If you are using the jquery.ui.autocomplete.js try this instead
.bind("keydown.autocomplete") or .live("keydown.autocomplete")
if not, use the jquery.ui.autocomplete.js and see if it'll work
If that doesn't apply, I don't know how to help you bro
Just to add, you can use the .livequery plugin for this:
$('.foo').livequery(function() {
// This will fire for each matched element.
// It will also fire for any new elements added to the DOM.
$(this).autocomplete(options);
});
To get autocomplete working when loaded dynamically for the on() event used in jQuery > 1.7, using the syntax Nathan Strutz provides in his comment:
$(document).on('focus', '.my-field:not(.ui-autocomplete-input)', function (e) {
$(this).autocomplete(options)
});
where .my-field is a selector for your autocomplete input element.
.live() does not work with focus.
also keyup.autocmplete does not make any sense.
Instead the thing I have tried and working is this
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.search').live('keyup' , function()
{
$(this).autocomplete({ source : 'url.php' });
});
})
This works perfectly fine.
You can't. .live() only supports actual JavaScript events, not any custom event. This is a fundamental limitation of how .live() works.
You can try using this:
$('.foo').live('focus.autocomplete', function() {
$(this).autocomplete({...});
});
After reading and testing everyone else's answers I have updated it for the current version of JQuery and made a few tweaks.
The problem with using keydown as the event that calls .autocomplete() is that it fails to autocomplete for that first letter typed. Using focus is the better choice.
Another thing I have noticed is that all of the given solutions result in .autocomplete() being called multiple times. If you are adding an element dynamically to the page that will not be removed again, the event should only be fired once. Even if the item is to be removed and added again, the event should be removed and then added back each time the element is removed or added so that focusing on the field again will not unnecessarily call .autocomplete() every time.
My final code is as follows:
$(document).on('focus.autocomplete', '#myAutocomplete', function(e){
$(this).autocomplete(autocompleteOptions);
$(document).off('focus.autocomplete', '#myAutocomplete');
});
autocomplete is not an event rather a function that enables autocomplete functionality for a textbox.
So if you can modify the js that creates the textboxes dynamically to wrap the textbox element in as a jquery object and call autocomplete on that object.
I just noticed you edited your post with this answer. It was obvious to me so I'm posting it below for others. Thank you.
$(function()
{
$('.search').live('keyup.autocomplete', function()
{
$(this).autocomplete({ source : 'url.php' });
});
});
This works for me:
$(function()
{
$('.item_product').live('focus.autocomplete', function()
{
$(this).autocomplete("/source.php/", {
width: 550,
matchContains: true,
mustMatch: false,
selectFirst: false,
});
});
});
You can just put the autocomplete inside input live event, like this:
$('#input-element').live('input', function(){
$("#input-element").autocomplete(options);
});