vote up 2 vote down star

To make click-able divs, I do:

<div class="clickable" url="http://google.com">
    blah blah
</div>

and then

$("div.clickable").click(
function()
{
    window.location = $(this).attr("url");
});

I don't know if this is the best way, but it works perfectly with me, except for one issue: If the div contains a click-able element, such as <a href="...">, and the user clicks on the hyperlink, both the hyperlink and div's-clickable are called

This is especially a problem when the anchor tag is referring to a javascript AJAX function, which executes the AJAX function AND follows the link in the 'url' attribute of the div.

Anyway around this?

flag

3 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

If you return "false" from your function it'll stop the event bubbling, so only your first event handler will get triggered (ie. your anchor will not see the click).

$("div.clickable").click(
function()
{
    window.location = $(this).attr("url");
    return false;
});
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vote up 4 vote down

$("div.clickable").click( function(event) { window.location = $(this).attr("url"); event.preventDefault(); });

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vote up 0 vote down

I know that if you were to change that to an href you'd do:

$("a#link1").click(function(event) {
  event.preventDefault();
  $('div.link1').show();
  //whatever else you want to do
});

so if you want to keep it with the div, I'd try

$("div.clickable").click(function(event) {
  event.preventDefault();
  window.location = $(this).attr("url");
});
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