Edit: this can be useful but may not work as OP's question requires. The handler that fires on one
does not get attached to the end of the current handler queue, it only runs on subsequent events.
For future readers, you can achieve this by proxying the handler using one()
.
$('.some-class').on('anevent', function(evt) {
$(this).one(evt.type, function(evt) {
//this code will fire after all other handlers for this event, except others that are proxied the same way
console.log(evtO == evt, 'same event');
if (evt.isDefaultPrevented())//can check signals to see whether you should still handle this event
return;
//do stuff last
});
})
Later on somewhere else:
$('.some-class').on('anevent', function(evt) {
//do stuff first
evt.preventDefault();//can signal to prevent the proxied function. could use evt.stopPropagation() instead
})
The one caveat is that if a later handler uses a return false;
or stopImmediatePropagation()
, the function bound with one()
will fire first the next time that event occurs, unless you explicitly unbind it somehow.