You can use a timeout to postpone the removal for some milliseconds.
example : http://jsfiddle.net/vkun9/7/
$(this).blur(function() {
var _this = this;
setTimeout(function(){$(_this).next().remove();},100);
});
I also moved the blur
attaching to be outside of the click handler, as it was adding an additional one each time the element was clicked, and changed the click handler to the focus to avoid multiple remove
buttons from repeated clicking on the input, as @dheerosaur noted.
so
$('#n')
.focus(function() {
$(this).parent().append('<a href="javascript:void()"> delete</a>');
$(this).next().click(function() {
alert('clicked'); //this not working
});
})
.blur(function() {
var _this = this;
setTimeout(function(){$(_this).next().remove();},100);
});
What you experience, though, is not a problem. It is the normal behaviour, as the element need to lose focus (fires the blur) before another element can have it.
You should also match the label for
attribute with the id of the input element.