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Ok, lets begin.

this code works fine in console, doing what is required from it.

$('#tasks-table input').parent().html($('#tasks-table input').siblings('textarea').val())

but in such a call it doesn't even execute. console is silent. all other function code is executed properly

updateTask.call(this, 131)

any ideas?

update

this

$('#tasks-table input').parent().html($('#tasks-table input').siblings('textarea').val())

is part of this

updateTask.call(this, 131)

and gets ignored in updateTask this instruction works from console just fine, but does not when it's a part of updateTask

html is a 4-row php-generated table with a row typical to this

<tr>
  <td><?php echo $task->id ?></td>
  <td onclick='projects.editTask.call(this, <?php echo $task->id ?>)'><?php echo $task->text ?> </td>
  <td><?php echo $task->status ?></td>
  <td><?php echo $task->controls ?></td>
</tr>

editTask is a simple replace function(contents of td turned into textarea)

if(block || !($(this).attr('incomplete'))) return; //only one is allowed
block = true;
if(!$(this).children('textarea').length) {
   $(this).html('<textarea style="width: 100%; height: 110px;">'+$(this).html()+'</textarea><br/><input type="button" value="Сохранить" onclick="projects.updateTask.call(this, '+parseInt(id)+')" />');
} 

the goal of updateTask is to replace anything within td back to contents of textarea and send an update request back to server using $.post contents of updateTask

var text = $(this).siblings('textarea').val();
//does not work only here, but works anywhere else
$('#tasks-table input').parent().text($('#tasks-table input').siblings('textarea').val())
$.post('/projects/ajax/', {
   ajax: true,
   command: 'update',
   id: id,
   text: text }
  , function() { 
     block = false; 
  }); 

When I do it more complicated way, it works. more simple way like this one:

$(this).parent().html(text)

didn't work too

5
  • Did you check to see if your selectors are working? Aug 7, 2012 at 20:35
  • 2
    Based on what you've posted I don't see how the code chunks you posted are even related.
    – j08691
    Aug 7, 2012 at 20:49
  • update task is a function, part of Projects object, called in non-object context
    – baldrs
    Aug 8, 2012 at 12:24
  • Instead of storing the original cell contents in a textarea, why not store it in $.data on the element? The dynamic addition/querying of the textarea seems to be causing problems. Aug 8, 2012 at 13:17
  • Because they are intended to be edited in that textarea =)
    – baldrs
    Aug 13, 2012 at 8:49

1 Answer 1

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Edit: Revisiting your question, it looks like the point I focused on may not be exactly the problem. I won't delete it because it is a valid issue with the code you posted. The issue with the textarea value not being queried or modified is most likely because you're adding the textarea after the DOM has loaded. You should be able to use a jquery.live() event on your table or the delegate event at the end of this post. Both are valid for any current or future DOM elements. These are a life saver when performing any DOM manipulation or ajax-based HTML updates. This would also explain why you're able to perform the operation in the console and not in the code.

Original answer: I'm not sure if this will help fully, but I think what is preventing your code from executing is:

if(block || !($(this).attr('incomplete'))) return;

When your table cells don't have that attribute, you're actually executing:

if( block || !(undefined) ) return;

Which will always be true because !(undefined) is true. You most likely want to be forcing a boolean value:

if( block || !!(undefined) ) return;

This is fine if you are only expecting undefined and any text value. A better way to modify this condition is to explicitly check the value you're expected (and I'm assuming you expect to be "true"):

if(block || ($(this).attr('incomplete') === "true") ) return;

Suggestion:

One suggestion I would make is instead of inlining the onclick function, use HTML5 data-* attributes to store your data and perform the code in one place. This helps keep JavaScript in a single place and doesn't mix it throughout the HTML.

For example, you can generate a data-id attribute for each table cell and mark your table row editable with data-edit-cell="true"

<table>
<tr data-edit-cell="true">
  <td data-id="1">cell one</td>
  <td data-id="2">cell two</td>
  <td data-id="3">cell three</td>
  <td data-id="4">cell four</td>
</tr>
</table>​

Then, a second suggestion, instead of binding a click event to each cell , you can bind an event to the row using jquery.delegate(), which watches for bubbling events (click) of a child defined by a selector (td):

var block = false;
$('tr[data-edit-cell=true]').delegate('td', 'click', function() {
    if (block || $(this).attr('incomplete') === "true" ) return; //only one is allowed
    block = true;
    console.log('clicked: ' + $(this).attr('data-id'));
});​

I've created a jsfiddle here so you can check this code out.

1
  • jquery update fixed my problem, but thanks for revealing me data attributes usefullness =)
    – baldrs
    Aug 17, 2012 at 14:44

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