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I am making a live search box and it seems that if I type normally and fast, it does not clear the html results in the div. Instead it puts the results for each keystroke in the div.

$('.searchbox').live('keydown', function(e){
  searchnow = $('.searchbox').val();
  $('#searchresultssmall').html(" ");
  setTimeout(function(){
 $('#searchresultssmall').show();
 fetch(400,"task=search&search="+searchnow);
   },1000);
 });

My fetch code is WAY too big, but is a piece of it

case 400: if(obj.id) { $('#searchresultssmall').append('<div class="smallresult">'+obj.username+'</div>'); } break;

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2 Answers 2

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The problem here is you're indiscriminately setting a timeout for searching 1 second after a keydown, this has a few issues:

  • The user may have reversed and changed input
  • Server requests are not guaranteed to return in order (some searches may be easier/faster than others)

What you should do is store that timer so you can clear it and not run any previously queued searches using clearTimeout(), like this:

var timerId;
$('.searchbox').live('keydown', function(e){
  searchnow = $('.searchbox').val();
  $('#searchresultssmall').html(" ");

  clearTimeout(timerId);
  timerId = setTimeout(function(){
    $('#searchresultssmall').show();
    fetch(400,"task=search&search="+searchnow);
  },1000);
});

Also, you'll need to store the request inside your fetch() method (I can't be clear without more detail on this method) so you can call .abort() on the previous request...so it can't come back later and replace the results of the latest thing the user actually typed in. If that request already completed, well no harm there, it won't be messing with the results later down the line, it's already run its course and you've cleared it with the .html(" ") on this event handler.

1

You need to clear the previous timer. Optimized code would be:

var showResultsTimer = 0;
$('.searchbox').live('keydown', function(e){
    searchnow = this.value;
    var oResultPanel = $('#searchresultssmall');
    oResultPanel.html(" ");
    if (showResultsTimer)
        window.clearTimeout(showResultsTimer);
    showResultsTimer = window.setTimeout(function(){
        oResultPanel.show();
        fetch(400,"task=search&search="+searchnow);
    },1000);
});

This will show only the final value.

Edit: quick test reminded me that using keydown is wrong in your case, as you'll always miss the last character entered by the user. Use keyup instead.

Live test case.

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  • The if (showResultsTimer) portion is (IMO) redundant here, a clearTimeout() of an invalid timer is safe. Also, this doesn't solve the problem of previous requests returning out of order :) Nov 6, 2011 at 11:59
  • Good point, still prefer not to run clearTimeout when there's nothing to clear - just personal habit. :-) Nov 6, 2011 at 12:04

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