It actually doesn't have anything to do with the confirm; it's the fact you're clicking a link (I'm guessing the link has either href="" or href="#" in it). The browser is following the link, which is the default action for the click event of links.
You need to prevent the default action, which you can do by returning false from your function, or by accepting the event argument to your click function and calling event.preventDefault().
Returning false (which both prevents the default action and stops the click bubbling to ancestor elements):
$(document).ready(function()
{
$('table#example td a.delete').click(function()
{
if (confirm("Are you sure you want to delete this row?"))
{
alert("You Press OK");
}
return false;
});
});
Using preventDefault (which only prevents the default, and doesn't stop bubbling; ancestor elements will also see the click):
$(document).ready(function()
{
// Note argument -----------------------------v
$('table#example td a.delete').click(function(event)
{
event.preventDefault();
if (confirm("Are you sure you want to delete this row?"))
{
alert("You Press OK");
}
});
});