9

I've noticed a strange behaviour of the live() function in jQuery:

<a href="#" id="normal">normal</a>
<a href="#" id="live">live</a>

$('#normal').click(clickHandler);
$('#live').live('click', clickHandler);

function clickHandler() {
    alert("Clicked");
    return false;
}

That's fine and dandy until you right-click on the "live" link and it fires the handler, and then doesn't show the context menu. The event handler doesn't fire at all (as expected) on the "normal" link.

I've been able to work around it by changing the handler to this:

function clickHandler(e) {
    if (e.button != 0) return true;
    // normal handler code here
    return false;
}

But that's really annoying to have to add that to all the event handlers. Is there any better way to have the event handlers only fire like regular click handlers?

4
  • 1
    How do you ask a question in the future? Sep 29, 2009 at 0:27
  • I was excited to see your workaround here, and promptly tried this on my own app, and although the links i'm right-clicking on now can be caught and ignored, I'm still not seeing my right-click context menu on these. Also, my middle mouse button click (open in a new tab) doesn't work either. But, at least the handler can return early!
    – Funka
    Oct 29, 2009 at 19:55
  • Actually, it seems if I right-click repeatedly, quickly, I can occasionally get the context-menu to appear.... Hmmm.
    – Funka
    Oct 29, 2009 at 19:55
  • it seems like a double-right-click is what will consistently bring up a context menu for me in Firefox when using live on the click...
    – Funka
    Nov 18, 2009 at 0:47

5 Answers 5

9

It's a known issue:

It seems like Firefox does not fire a click event for the element on a right-click, although it fires a mousedown and mouseup. However, it does fire a click event on document! Since .live catches events at the document level, it sees the click event for the element even though the element itself does not. If you use an event like mouseup, both the p element and the document will see the event.

Your workaround is the best you can do for now. It appears to only affect Firefox (I believe it's actually a bug in Firefox, not jQuery per se).

See also this question asked yesterday.

4

I've found a solution - "fix" the the live() code itself.

In the unminified source of jQuery 1.3.2 around line 2989 there is a function called liveHandler(). Modify the code to add one line:

2989:    function liveHandler(event) {
2990:        if (event.type == 'click' && event.button != 0) return true;

This will stop the click events from firing on anything but the left-mouse button. If you particularly wanted, you could quite easy modify the code to allow for "rightclick" events too, but this works for me so it's staying at that.

3

You can actually rewrite it as:

function reattachEvents(){
    $(element).unbind('click').click(function(){
        //do something
    });
}

and call it when you add a new dom element, it should have the expected result (no firing on the right click event).

2
  • 1
    yeah, but that defeats the purpose of live() doesn't it?
    – nickf
    Nov 8, 2009 at 22:40
  • true, but live(click) acts differently than normal click() which can be fixed if you detect which button was pressed, but then you need to know exactly which browser was used (IE acts differently in earlier versions than newer versions and all other browsers act the 'correct' way). This is a much more elegant solution for the time being.
    – SeanJA
    Nov 9, 2009 at 6:08
0

This is an unfortunate consequence of how live is implemented. It's actually uses event bubbling so you're not binding to the anchor element's click event, you're binding to the document's click event.

2
  • Nope, there's a flaw in the way Firefox bubbles right-click. See unixpapa.com/js/mouse.html Sep 28, 2009 at 23:29
  • @crescentfresh: I'm not sure how much faith to place in an article that says "Macintosh versions of Safari, of course, are immune to these problems, because Macintoshes only have one mouse button" - the last time I used a Mac with a single--button mouse was sometime before TBL invented the Web ;-)
    – NickFitz
    Sep 29, 2009 at 13:06
0

I solved this by using mousedown events. In my situation the distinction between mousedown and click didn't matter.

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