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I wrote a function named confirmMessage(msg) to work with onclick event of links:

<a href="delete.php?id=12" onclick="return confirmMessage('Are You REALLY Sure?')">Delete</a>

The code of the function is:

<script>
    function confirmMessage(msg){
    p = true
    elementHtml = '<div id="ConfirmMessage">'+msg+'</div>';
    $("body").append(elementHtml);
    $("#ConfirmMessage").dialog({
      resizable: false,
      height:140,
      modal: true,
      buttons: {
        "Delete": function() {
        p = true;           
          $( this ).dialog( "close" );

        },
        Cancel: function() {
        p = false;
          $( this ).dialog( "close" );

        }
      }
    }

    );

    return p;

}

    </script>

In the function above I set a variable p to be case container i.e. true or false and initially I set it to be true. Also, The message element is created on the fly. However, when I click on the delete link, it dose not wait till I decide to delete or cancel and it go to delete.

When I set p initially to be false, it does not do anything else closing the dialog what ever the decision.

Where is the mistake in this code?!

1
  • 2
    Because it is asynchronous! There is no way to wait for the user to click the buttons before continuing. Oct 10, 2013 at 23:05

3 Answers 3

2

jQuery dialog asynchronous -- it doesn't block. The function will go on and return without waiting for a response. You will need to use the following code:

function confirmMessage(msg,goto){
    elementHtml = '<div id="ConfirmMessage">'+msg+'</div>';
    $("body").append(elementHtml);
    $("#ConfirmMessage").dialog({
        resizable: false,
        height:140,
        modal: true,
        buttons: {
            "Delete": function() {   
                 $( this ).dialog( "close" );
                 window.location.href=goto;
             },
             Cancel: function() {
                 $( this ).dialog( "close" );
             },
         },
     });
    return false;
}

and:

<a href="delete.php?id=12" onclick="return confirmMessage('Are You REALLY Sure?',this.href)">Delete</a>

Changing so the return is not what is actually determining what happens.

See this JSFiddle.

3
  • 1
    Thank you very much, your solution is perfect, However, I used it with more generalization. Instead of regarding fixed goto I used this.
    – SaidbakR
    Oct 11, 2013 at 0:11
  • 1
    Yes that is a better solution, I will edit my answer.
    – Robin
    Oct 11, 2013 at 0:12
  • After banging my head for hours, finally found this gem buried under heaps of Google results. Thank god. Oct 21, 2013 at 6:20
2

Your mistake is in thinking that the function waits for you to click on one of the buttons before returning. .dialog() displays the dialog and returns immediately. Responding to user interactions must be done in callback functions.

Use the close: handler to run code when the dialog is closed:

$("#ConfirmMessage").dialog({
  resizable: false,
  height:140,
  modal: true,
  close: function() {
    if (p) {
        ...
    } else {
        ...
    }
  },
  buttons: {
    "Delete": function() {
    p = true;           
      $( this ).dialog( "close" );

    },
    Cancel: function() {
    p = false;
      $( this ).dialog( "close" );

    }
  }
}

);
3
  • I tried your code with replacing ... by return true and return false respectively. However, it does not solve the issue too!
    – SaidbakR
    Oct 10, 2013 at 23:40
  • You don't seem to understand asynchronous operations. There's nothing to return to. You need to take action, like submitting or not submitting an AJAX request.
    – Barmar
    Oct 10, 2013 at 23:43
  • It's built into the browser, and it's synchronous, it doesn't manipulate the DOM like jQuery UI does.
    – Barmar
    Oct 10, 2013 at 23:46
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you "return p" is executed before you are even able to see the modal window. your dialog method is executed asynchronously

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