vote up 1 vote down star

I've got a page with a variable number of <select> elements (which explains why I'm using event delegation here). When the user changes the selected option, I want to hide/show different content areas on the page. Here's the code I have:

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('#container').change(function(e) {
    var changed = $(e.target);

    if (changed.is('select[name="mySelectName"]')) {
      // Test the selected option and hide/show different content areas.
    }
  });
});

This works in Firefox and Safari, but in IE the change event doesn't fire. Anyone know why? Thanks!

flag

75% accept rate
According to MSDN, the change event doesn't bubble in IE, so unless jQuery is doing some magic, event delegation won't work: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – NickFitz Oct 28 at 14:38

4 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

The change event does not bubble in IE (See here and here). You cannot use event delegation in tandem with it. In fact, it is because of this IE bug that jQuery live had to officially exclude change from the list of supported events (FYI the DOM spec states change should bubble).

You will need to bind directly to each select:

$('#container select').change(/*...*/)

If you really want event delegation you might find some success trying what this person did and bind to click in IE only, which does bubble:

$('#container').bind($.browser.msie ? 'click' : 'change', function(event) {
    /* test event.type and event.target 
     * to capture only select control changes
     */
})

But this browser detection feels really wrong. I'd really try working with the former example (binding directly to the drop downs). Unless you have hundreds of <select> boxes, event delegation wouldn't buy you much here anyway.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I'm trying to understand why you need to double check the name of the select after receiving an event to it.

Do you by any chance have multiple elements with the same id ?

Did you actually mean to say "#container select" instead of "#container" ?

link|flag
No. I'm using event delegation because I don't want to attach the event to every single <select> on the page because there's the potential for dozens of them. By attaching it to the container, there's only a single attachment. – jstayton Oct 28 at 14:22
And there are other <select> elements on the page that I don't want this event to fire on. – jstayton Oct 28 at 14:23
You can add an ID to the select element itself – fudgey Oct 28 at 14:44
vote up 1 vote down

Idea that might help:

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('#container select[name="mySelectName"]').change(function(e) {
    var s = $(e.target);
    if (s.val()=='1') //hide/show something;
  });
});

If you are using AJAX, try live() function:

 $(document).ready(function() {
       $('#container select[name="mySelectName"]').live('change', function(e) {
        var s = $(e.target);
        if (s.val()=='1') //hide/show something;
      });
    });
link|flag
1  
jQuery/live() does not support the change event. See docs.jquery.com/Events/live#typefn – Crescent Fresh Oct 28 at 14:47
@crescentfresh That's something new to me, thanks. – Arnis L. Oct 28 at 16:24
vote up 1 vote down

If I recall correctly you will need to call blur() to have jQuery invoke change() on IE machines. Try something like:

$("select[name=mySelectName]").click(function() {
    $(this).blur();
});
link|flag
Unfortunately, this doesn't do the trick. The event still isn't fired, even when the <select> is blurred. – jstayton Oct 28 at 14:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.