Almost three years later, I am looking for something similar. Since I have not found an acceptable "quick" solution, I wrote something that comes very close to the criteria of the OP. I figure others may find it useful in the future.
JavaScript is event-driven and that means it does not support any sort of "wait" or "sleep" loop that we can use to pause a pure-javascript confirm function. The options involve burning processor cycles, using a browser plugin, or AJAX. In our increasingly mobile world, and with sometimes spotty internet connections, none of these are great solutions. This means that we have to return from our "confirm" function immediately.
However, since there is no "false" logic in the code snippet above (ie. nothing is done when the user clicks "Cancel"), we can trigger the "click" or "submit" event again when the user clicks "OK." Why not set a flag and react based on that flag within our "confirm" function?
For my solution, I opted to use FastConfirm rather than a "modal" dialog. You can easily modify the code to use anything you want but my example was designed to use this:
https://github.com/pjparra/Fast-Confirm
Due to the nature of what this does, I do not see a clean way to package it up. If you feel that this has too many rough edges, feel free to smooth them out or rewrite your code the way that everyone else has recommended:
/* This version of $.fn.hasEvent is slightly modified to provide support for
* the "onclick" or "onsubmit" tag attributes. I chose this because it was
* short, even if it is cryptic.
*
* Learn more about the code by Sven Eisenschmidt, which is licensed under
* the MIT and GPL at:
* http://github.com/fate/jquery-has-event
*/
(function($) {
$.fn.hasEvent = function(A, F, E) {
var L = 0;
var T = typeof A;
E = E ? E : this;
var V = (E.attr('on'+A) != undefined);
A = (T == 'string') ? $.trim(A) : A;
if (T == 'function')
F = A, A = null;
if (F == E)
delete(F);
var S = E.data('events');
for (e in S)
if (S.hasOwnProperty(e))
L++;
if (L < 1)
return V; // = false;
if (A && !F) {
return V = S.hasOwnProperty(A);
} else if(A && S.hasOwnProperty(A) && F) {
$.each(S[A], function(i, r) {
if(V == false && r.handler == F) V = true;
});
return V;
} else if(!A && F) {
$.each(S, function(i, s) {
if (V == false) {
$.each(s, function(k, r) {
if (V == false && r.handler == F)
V = true;
});
}
});
}
return V;
}
$.extend($, {hasEvent: $.fn.hasEvent});
}) (jQuery);
/* Nearly a drop-in replacement for JavaScript's confirm() dialog.
* Syntax:
* onclick="return jq_confirm(this, 'Are you sure that you want this?', 'right');"
*
* NOTE: Do not implement "false" logic when using this function. Find another way.
*/
var jq_confirm_bypass = false;
function jq_confirm(el, question, pos) {
var override = false;
var elem = $(el);
if ($.fn.fastConfirm == undefined) {
override = confirm(question);
} else if (!jq_confirm_bypass) {
if (pos == undefined) {
pos = 'right';
}
elem.fastConfirm({
position: pos,
questionText: question,
onProceed: function(trigger) {
var elem = $(trigger);
elem.fastConfirm('close');
if (elem.hasEvent('click')) {
jq_confirm_bypass = true;
elem.click();
jq_confirm_bypass = false;
}
if (elem.hasEvent('submit')) {
jq_confirm_bypass = true;
elem.submit();
jq_confirm_bypass = false;
}
// TODO: ???
},
onCancel: function(trigger) {
$(trigger).fastConfirm('close');
}
});
}
return override ? override : jq_confirm_bypass;
}
So... onclick="return confirm('Do you want to test this?');" would become onclick="return jq_confirm(this, 'Do you want to test this?');" The pos/"right" parameter is optional and is specifically for Fast-Confirm.
When you click, the jq_confirm() function will spawn the jQuery dialog and return "false." When the user clicks "OK" then jq_confirm() sets a flag, calls the original click (or submit) event, returns "true", then unsets the flag in case you want to remain on the same page.