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Possible Duplicate:
$(this) inside of AJAX success not working

I am using one button click in which an ajax call back is there. If it return success I want to add a class to my button like $(this).addClass('abc'); but of no use. $(this) is not working in AJAX. What is the alternate method to do this, because there are several same blocks.

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  • 4
    Cache this in a variable before doing the ajax request.
    – elclanrs
    Jan 24, 2013 at 8:18
  • 1
    Maybe you can show code snippets from your button click? Jan 24, 2013 at 8:20

4 Answers 4

7

Once you are inside of the AJAX callback this does not point to your button any more (google "JavaScript closures and this" for more).

You need to save the reference to the current this into a variable and then use that to add classes. Something like this:

$( '#button' ).click ( function () {
  var $this = $( this );
  $.get (
    'url',
    function ( data ) {
      $this.addClass ( 'abc' );
    }
  );
} );
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4

You are correct. this is not accessible inside the ajax call as it is a reference to the ajax object. You can however save it as another variable and use that within the callback.

Working demo: http://jsfiddle.net/gZ8qB/

$("#mybutton").click(function () {
    var $this = $(this);
    $.ajax({
        url: "http://fiddle.jshell.net/favicon.png",
        beforeSend: function ( xhr ) {
            xhr.overrideMimeType("text/plain; charset=x-user-defined");
        }
    }).done(function ( data ) {
        $this.addClass("done");
    });
});
2

save $(this) to a variable.. and use that

try this

var $this=$(this);

make a ajax call.. and use

 $this.addClass("done");
1

The $(this) object is not defined in the callback function of an AJAX call. If you need to reference the original element that triggered the call, you can assign it to a variable in the event handler function, making it also available within the scope of the callback function.

For example (using the $.get shorthand):

$('#some-button').on('click', function() {
    var some_button = $(this); // Assign the variable in the event handler
    $.get('some_url',{some_ariable:'some_value'}, function(data) {
         some_button.addClass('some_class'); // some_button is now also in the scope of the AJAX callback function
    });
});

This concept is called closures, wherein "functions have access to variables that were available in the scope where the function was created". See jQuery's - Javascript 101 for more on this subject.

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