8

If I have an a tag:

<a id="delete-event" href="/delete/1234">Delete</a>

And some javascript which prompts to confirm the delete:

 $("#delete-event").click(function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();

    bootbox.confirm("Are you sure you wish to delete this?", function(confirmed) {
        if(confirmed) {
            return true;
        }
    }); 
});

I thought doing e.preventDefault() would prevent the a href from firing, but its not. When I click the a tag it simply goes to the url, without executing the javascript. How can I make this work?

Thanks.

7
  • Is your jQuery after the a is rendered to the page or within a ready event? Jul 8, 2012 at 0:37
  • Yeah, the JS above is inside $(document).ready()
    – Justin
    Jul 8, 2012 at 0:37
  • If you get rid of the bootbox.confirm() just as a test, does it work? Jul 8, 2012 at 0:38
  • Replace the bootbox.confirm with just a JS alert to see if it even gets that far. I don't think return true will cause the link to fire after you've already done preventDefault()
    – sachleen
    Jul 8, 2012 at 0:39
  • @sachleen You're probably right, replace return true; with window.location = $('#delete-event').attr('href'); Jul 8, 2012 at 0:41

5 Answers 5

15

This code works:

You can't just do return true and expect the link to fire after you've done e.preventDefault(). I had to replace your bootbox.confirm() with a JS confirm but it should still work.

$("#delete-event").click(function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
    var a = confirm("yes?");
    if(a) window.location = $('#delete-event').attr('href');
});​

DEMO

Try replacing your code block with the one I provided above. If that works, put your bootbox confirmation back in and try again. That'll tell you where the error is.

7

It's better to prevent it only when needed. For example, if the user selected "Cancel" from the confirm box, then prevent the default.

$("#delete-event").click(function(e) {
    if (!confirm('Are you sure you wish to delete this?')) {
        e.preventDefault();
    } 
});​

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/SCCDX/

Normally, when you need a confirm this is the best way to accomplish it, and it's event more useful for confirmations before submitting forms.

I am not sure if bootbox replicates the behavior of browsers when you ask for confirmation. So it may not work in this scenario. If that is the case a better approach is to set a flag somewhere.

$("#delete-event").click(function(e) {
    if (!$(this).data('confirmed')) {
       e.preventDefault()
    } else {
       bootbox.confirm("Are you sure you wish to delete this?", function(confirmed) {
          if(confirmed) {
              $(this).data('confirmed', 1).click();           
          }
       });        
    }
});​

// Disclaimer: This code is untested. clicking on the link may cause data loss. lol 

Somehow, I don't like the window.location method, cause it may cause any other events attached to this element to fail.

2

I met this problem too.

You can use window.location make browser visit new page, but current page is not recorded in the browser history (at least with google chrome).

So I agree with SMathew that the new event should be triggered. But due to some security reason, the click event on anchors triggered by jQuery do not make browser visit new page. Finally I found the following code works.

$("a.confirm").on('click', function(e) {
    if (!$(this).data('confirmed')) {
        e.preventDefault();
        var a = this;
        bootbox.confirm("Are you sure?", "No", "Yes", function(result) {
            if(result) {
                $(a).data('confirmed', 1);
                if (document.createEvent) {
                    var evObj = document.createEvent('MouseEvents');
                    evObj.initEvent('click', true, true);
                    a.dispatchEvent(evObj);
                }
                else if (document.createEventObject) {
                    a.fireEvent('onclick');
                }
            }
        });
    }
});

I just test above code in google chrome, and I found fire event code from https://getsatisfaction.com/issuu/topics/opening_the_issuu_smartlook_viewer_with_my_flash_website?utm_content=topic_link&utm_medium=email&utm_source=reply_notification

MORE

I found this post https://stackoverflow.com/a/18132076/1194307 , and jQuery.simulate can be used to solve this problem. My final code looks like:

$("[data-toggle=confirm]").on('click', function(e) {
    var a = $(this);
    if (!a.data('confirmed')) {
        e.preventDefault();

        var question = a.data('question');
        if (!question) question = 'Are you sure?';

        var yes = a.data('yes');
        if (!yes) yes = 'Yes';

        var no = a.data('no');
        if (!no) no = 'No';

        bootbox.confirm(question, no, yes, function(result) {
            if(result) {
                a.data('confirmed', 1).simulate('click');
            }
        });
    }
});

It works on anchors and form buttons.

0

You need to return false; for anchor tags.

See this jsFiddle.

4
  • Weird. I ran into this same problem today & returning false fixed it. Jul 8, 2012 at 0:44
  • @DeanBrundage return false will work if you have something like <a href="page.html" onclick="alert('hi'); return false;">afd</a> but e.preventDefault() takes care of that already.
    – sachleen
    Jul 8, 2012 at 0:46
  • My situation was similar: a jQuery click handler, not inline javascript. Jul 8, 2012 at 0:49
  • @DeanBrundage return false (at the end) alone will work in this code, too. I'm just saying there's no need for both. I'd have to see your code to see what's going on.
    – sachleen
    Jul 8, 2012 at 0:51
0

Try this code:

$(".SelectedPassengers").each(function () {
            debugger;

        if ($(this).text() == "") {
            debugger;
            var id = this.id.split('-');
            alert("Please Select Passenger " + id[1]);
            var h = "" + this.id;
          // $(this).preventDefault();
           //$('#' + h).focus();
           //this.preventDefault();
           stopEvent = "enter";
        }

    });
    if (stopEvent != "") {
        stopEvent = "";
        event.preventDefault();
        return false;
    }

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