1

Today I came across a bug in my web app regarding form search submit function (in js) and a button click action in jQuery.

I have a form that has the action submitEmpSearch() attached to it. This is embedded in the html of the form as it's onSubmit action. There is also a search button associated with the form with an onclick event submitEmpSearch(). I was making an attempt to clear out embedded javascript from the templates in favor of jQuery calls. In an included jQuery call I had the call $('#search-button').click( submitEmpSearch() ) inside my $(document).ready group.

From my previous experience with the .click() function, I expected this to have the same functionality as the embedded onclick attribute provided. However, instead, it gave the page an infinite loop of (apparently) clicking the button as soon as it loaded!

Now, previously, I always passed a function() {} pattern. I had never passed in a predefined function before. Is this some kind of gotcha in the jQuery language framework? Or is there something else I'm doing wrong?

5 Answers 5

4

jQuery is not a language. JavaScript is the language. You're passing the result of the function, when you want to pass the function itself:

It should be:

$('#search-button').click(submitEmpSearch)

In JavaScript, functions can be passed as values. However, submitEmpSearch() is the return value of a call to the function, as one would expect from other languages.

7
  • 1
    Just to say that jQuery is not a language. is well intended but awfully misguided :)
    – Christian
    Apr 1, 2011 at 1:14
  • 1
    @Christian, I disagree. People who think jQuery is a programming language tend to neglect to learn the real language they're working in. Then, they make mistakes like this. Apr 1, 2011 at 1:16
  • That's why I said it's "well intended", because this kind of syntax works the same for other languages out there. In PHP, for example, you pass the function name as a string. Other languages do the same as jquery(javascript), including c++ and delphi.
    – Christian
    Apr 1, 2011 at 1:18
  • This isn't really a mistake due to lack of jquery knowledge. Same exact mistake could've easily been made within the standard JavaScript syntax if jquery wasn't even used.
    – Kon
    Apr 1, 2011 at 1:18
  • 1
    @Christian, again, the language is JavaScript. I agree other languages behave similar to JavaScript in this regard (though PHP only recently got true closures). @Kon, I said the opposite of that; it's a mistake due to not learning "the real language", JavaScript. Apr 1, 2011 at 1:20
3

Instead of

$('search-button').click( submitEmpSearch() )

use just

$('#search-button').click( submitEmpSearch )

or

$('#search-button').click( function(){submitEmpSearch();} )

Also if the 'search-button' is a class you have to add a "." (dot) before it. If it is an id you have to add "#". See my examples.

0
1

Aha!

You should pass the function by reference, not call the function and pass its result:

function handler(){
    // ...
}
jQuery('.something').click(handler()); // <- wrong
jQuery('.something').click( handler ); // <- right
2
  • I swear I tried that after checking the jQuery docs: passing the reference to the function makes sense, but I don't think it solved anything. I was, however, pair programming and not the one in the driver's seat. I'm having it checked again. Apr 1, 2011 at 1:26
  • aahh, the wonders of group programming and missing things that should be obvious. tried it, fixed the bug, lost the button functionality. Forgot to actually add the id to the button. facepalm Apr 1, 2011 at 1:55
0

Change from:

$('search-button').click(submitEmpSearch())

to:

$('search-button').click(submitEmpSearch)

This way instead of executing submitEmpSearch() and passing its return value to the click(), you're passing the delegate to the click().

0

Try this.

$('#search-button').click(function(){
    submitEmpSearch();
});
2
  • There's no reason for the extra layer of indirection. Apr 1, 2011 at 1:15
  • It would work, but it's not answering the question really. Though I wouldn't have down voted.
    – Kon
    Apr 1, 2011 at 1:15

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