226

I'm trying to figure out how to execute some js code when an element is removed from the page:

jQuery('#some-element').remove(); // remove some element from the page
/* need to figure out how to independently detect the above happened */

is there an event tailored for that, something like:

jQuery('#some-element').onremoval( function() {
    // do post-mortem stuff here
});
2
  • 1
    out of curiousity, what would want to do with the element that has been removed?
    – Natrium
    Feb 4, 2010 at 14:52
  • 8
    I have an element that independently attaches itself to the piece I remove, so I want to detect when that piece is gone to eliminate that element as well. I could re-design the whole thing, but accomplishing the above will save me a lot of time (and code).
    – sa125
    Feb 7, 2010 at 7:06

16 Answers 16

198

You can use jQuery special events for this.

In all simplicity,

Setup:

(function($){
  $.event.special.destroyed = {
    remove: function(o) {
      if (o.handler) {
        o.handler()
      }
    }
  }
})(jQuery)

Usage:

$('.thing').bind('destroyed', function() {
  // do stuff
})

Addendum to answer Pierre and DesignerGuy's comments:

To not have the callback fire when calling $('.thing').off('destroyed'), change the if condition to: if (o.handler && o.type !== 'destroyed') { ... }

13
  • 15
    Really nice solution. Ben Alman has a nice writeup about special events for more info: benalman.com/news/2010/03/jquery-special-events
    – antti_s
    Apr 16, 2012 at 10:52
  • 11
    +1 had managed to completely miss these special events till now, darn useful! One thing to state having just implemented the above, it would be best to change o.handler() to o.handler.apply(this,arguments) otherwise the event and data objects don't get passed through the event listener.
    – Pebbl
    Nov 7, 2012 at 22:03
  • 6
    This doesn't work when you remove elements without jQuery, though.
    – djjeck
    Dec 29, 2012 at 0:06
  • 5
    this doesn't work a) when elements are detached instead of removed or b) when some old non-jquery libraries use innerHTML to destroy your elements (similar to what djjeck said)
    – Charon ME
    Jan 16, 2013 at 14:32
  • 5
    Beware that handler is called when you $('.thing').unbind('destroyed') which could really be annoying (since unbind means we do not want the handler to be called...)
    – Pierre
    Jan 17, 2013 at 17:19
124

Just checked, it is already built-in in current version of JQuery:

jQuery - v1.9.1

jQuery UI - v1.10.2

$("#myDiv").on("remove", function () {
    alert("Element was removed");
})

Important: This is functionality of Jquery UI script (not JQuery), so you have to load both scripts (jquery and jquery-ui) to make it work. Here is example: http://jsfiddle.net/72RTz/

10
  • 11
    This was very helpful. I learned that this functionality is within the "Widget" component of jQuery UI if you aren't looking to download the whole UI library.
    – Neil
    May 10, 2013 at 16:47
  • 5
    Is this documented anywhere? I just looked through the jQuery UI widget documentation and couldn't find a mention of this. Would like to see whether this is officially supported / any caveats about using it...
    – josh
    Aug 1, 2013 at 17:00
  • This one doesn't work - tried in jQuery 1.10.2, however the answer below by @mtkopone works perfectly therefore I would vote for updating the answer in that question
    – Marcin
    Oct 19, 2013 at 7:57
  • 23
    This one only partly works. If you do remove on the element it fires, but if the element is destroyed some other way, by being overwritten say, it doesn't work.
    – Carl Smith
    Oct 22, 2013 at 16:38
  • You might be right, probably there is other event name for this case. It would be great if you can provide jsfiddle sample for your case. Oct 22, 2013 at 16:41
58

You can bind to the DOMNodeRemoved event (part of DOM Level 3 WC3 spec).

Works in IE9, latest releases of Firefox and Chrome.

Example:

$(document).bind("DOMNodeRemoved", function(e)
{
    alert("Removed: " + e.target.nodeName);
});

You can also get notification when elements are inserting by binding to DOMNodeInserted

6
  • 13
    Note: "Adding DOM mutation listeners to a document profoundly degrades the performance of further DOM modifications to that document (making them 1.5 - 7 times slower!)." from: developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/Mutation_events May 23, 2012 at 14:01
  • 1
    Love this, although nodeName is rarely useful for me. I just use e.target.className or if ($(e.target).hasClass('my-class')) { .... Nov 2, 2012 at 3:24
  • This is not working on element itself, only its children.
    – Xdg
    Apr 3, 2016 at 8:27
  • Amazing answer! Really helped me!
    – Kir Mazur
    Mar 29, 2017 at 6:34
  • It may be slow and a bad idea for code in production, but this is looks like the only method that works synchronously (unlike MutationObserver) and for any node (not just nodes removed via jQuery). This is a great option for debugging. Mar 20, 2019 at 3:39
39

There is no built-in event for removing elements, but you can create one by fake-extending jQuery's default remove method. Note that the callback must be called before actually removing it to keep reference.

(function() {
    var ev = new $.Event('remove'),
        orig = $.fn.remove;
    $.fn.remove = function() {
        $(this).trigger(ev);
        return orig.apply(this, arguments);
    }
})();

$('#some-element').bind('remove', function() {
    console.log('removed!');
    // do pre-mortem stuff here
    // 'this' is still a reference to the element, before removing it
});

// some other js code here [...]

$('#some-element').remove();

Note: some problems with this answer have been outlined by other posters.

  1. This won't work when the node is removed via html() replace() or other jQuery methods
  2. This event bubbles up
  3. jQuery UI overrides remove as well

The most elegant solution to this problem seems to be: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10172676/216941

8
  • 2
    Thanks for that! One little addition: because the remove-event bubbles up, you'd also receive it when a child is removed, so better write the handler that way: $('#some-element').bind('remove', function(ev) { if (ev.target === this) { console.log('removed!'); } });
    – meyertee
    Mar 24, 2011 at 16:53
  • 3
    This didn't work out of the box for me - I had to return the result from orig.apply.
    – fturtle
    Jul 18, 2011 at 12:13
  • 1
    Actually, @Adam, it is, but it's cross browser compatible. With meyertee/fturtle's additions it's a perfectly reliable solution, as long as you only remove elements with this method, rather than modifying/emptying HTML etc. For something more flexible, yes DOM mutation events are fine but I've been sceptic of them as you should be listening for business events in an app, not DOM ones whose structure is likely to change with further development. Also, subscribing to DOM mutation events means your program is potentially susceptible to lagging in complex DOM hierarchies. Sep 23, 2011 at 14:34
  • 1
    My only diagreement on the accuracy is the statement - 'there is no built in event for removing elements' --- there IS a built in event for browsers that implement Level 3 DOM events (as detailed in my answer).
    – Adam
    Oct 17, 2011 at 17:40
  • 4
    While this will detect elements removed using the 'remove' function, it will fail to detect elements removed by other means (e.g. using jQuery's html, replace, etc). Please, see my answer for more complete solution.
    – zah
    Nov 3, 2011 at 0:54
33

Hooking .remove() is not the best way to handle this as there are many ways to remove elements from the page (e.g. by using .html(), .replace(), etc).

In order to prevent various memory leak hazards, internally jQuery will try to call the function jQuery.cleanData() for each removed element regardless of the method used to remove it.

See this answer for more details: javascript memory leaks

So, for best results, you should hook the cleanData function, which is exactly what the jquery.event.destroyed plugin does:

http://v3.javascriptmvc.com/jquery/dist/jquery.event.destroyed.js

2
  • This insight about cleanData was very helpful to me! Thank you very much, Joe :) Apr 5, 2012 at 16:57
  • 1
    Nice answer, but still that only works for jQuery methods. If you are integrating with another platform that can "pull the rug out" from under you - Adam's answer makes the most sense. Nov 16, 2012 at 19:37
8

Only jQuery is required (No jQuery UI needed)

(I have extracted this extension from the jQuery UI framework)

Works with: empty() and html() and remove()

$.cleanData = ( function( orig ) {
    return function( elems ) {
        var events, elem, i;
        for ( i = 0; ( elem = elems[ i ] ) != null; i++ ) {
            try {

                // Only trigger remove when necessary to save time
                events = $._data( elem, "events" );
                if ( events && events.remove ) {
                    $( elem ).triggerHandler( "remove" );
                }

            // Http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/8235
            } catch ( e ) {}
        }
        orig( elems );
    };
} )( $.cleanData );

With this solution you can also unbind the event handler.

$("YourElemSelector").off("remove");

Try it! - Example

$.cleanData = (function(orig) {
  return function(elems) {
    var events, elem, i;
    for (i = 0;
      (elem = elems[i]) != null; i++) {
      try {

        // Only trigger remove when necessary to save time
        events = $._data(elem, "events");
        if (events && events.remove) {
          $(elem).triggerHandler("remove");
        }

        // Http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/8235
      } catch (e) {}
    }
    orig(elems);
  };
})($.cleanData);


$("#DivToBeRemoved").on("remove", function() {
  console.log("div was removed event fired");
});

$("p").on("remove", function() {
  console.log("p was removed event fired");
});

$("span").on("remove", function() {
  console.log("span was removed event fired");
});

// $("span").off("remove");

$("#DivToBeRemoved").on("click", function() {
  console.log("Div was clicked");
});

function RemoveDiv() {
  //       $("#DivToBeRemoved").parent().html("");    
  $("#DivToBeRemoved").remove();
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<h3>OnRemove event handler attached to elements `div`, `p` and `span`.</h3>
<div class="container">
  <br>
  <button onclick="RemoveDiv();">Click here to remove div below</button>
  <div id="DivToBeRemoved">
    DIV TO BE REMOVED 
    contains 1 p element 
    which in turn contains a span element
    <p>i am p (within div)
      <br><br><span>i am span (within div)</span></p>
  </div>
</div>

Additional Demo - jsBin

7

For those who use jQuery UI:

jQuery UI has overridden some of the jQuery methods to implement a remove event that gets handled not only when you explicitly remove the given element, but also if the element gets removed from the DOM by any self-cleaning jQuery methods (e.g. replace, html, etc.). This basically allows you to put a hook into the same events that get fired when jQuery is "cleaning up" the events and data associated with a DOM element.

John Resig has indicated that he's open to the idea of implementing this event in a future version of jQuery core, but I'm not sure where it stands currently.

4

I couldn't get this answer to work with unbinding (despite the update see here), but was able to figure out a way around it. The answer was to create a 'destroy_proxy' special event that triggered a 'destroyed' event. You put the event listener on both 'destroyed_proxy' and 'destroyed', then when you want to unbind, you just unbind the 'destroyed' event:

var count = 1;
(function ($) {
    $.event.special.destroyed_proxy = {
        remove: function (o) {
            $(this).trigger('destroyed');
        }
    }
})(jQuery)

$('.remove').on('click', function () {
    $(this).parent().remove();
});

$('li').on('destroyed_proxy destroyed', function () {
    console.log('Element removed');
    if (count > 2) {
        $('li').off('destroyed');
        console.log('unbinded');
    }
    count++;
});

Here is a fiddle

1
  • What about browser compatibility here? Does it still work? Sep 9, 2016 at 9:04
3

I like mtkopone's answer using jQuery special events, but note that it doesn't work a) when elements are detached instead of removed or b) when some old non-jquery libraries use innerHTML to destroy your elements

2
  • 3
    I downvoted because the question asked explicitly for .remove() use, not detach. detach is used especially to not trigger cleanup since the element is probably planned to be reattached later. b) is still true and has yet no reliable handling, at least since DOM mutation events be implemented widely.
    – Pierre
    Jun 15, 2013 at 13:26
  • 4
    I bet you did this just to get the "critic" badge ;)
    – Charon ME
    Jun 17, 2013 at 14:33
1

I'm not sure there is an event handle for this, so you would have to keep a copy of the DOM and compare to the existing DOM in some kind of polling loop - which could be quite nasty. Firebug does this though - if you inspect the HTML and run some DOM-changes, it highlights the changes in yellow in the Firebug console for a short time.

Alternatively, you could create a remove function...

var removeElements = function(selector) {
    var elems = jQuery(selector);

    // Your code to notify the removal of the element here...
    alert(elems.length + " elements removed");

    jQuery(selector).remove();
};

// Sample usage
removeElements("#some-element");
removeElements("p");
removeElements(".myclass");
1
  • 1
    +1 for this idea. Though you could also extend jQuery (plugin style) in order to get a more standard jQuery call like: $('.itemToRemove').customRemove();. You could also make it so that it accepts a callback as a parameter.
    – user113716
    Feb 4, 2010 at 15:06
1

This.

$.each(
  $('#some-element'), 
        function(i, item){
            item.addEventListener('DOMNodeRemovedFromDocument',
                function(e){ console.log('I has been removed'); console.log(e);
                })
         })
1
  • 1
    DOMNodeRemovedFromDocument seems to not be supported in Firefox. Perhaps try MutationObserver instead?
    – EricP
    Oct 21, 2014 at 19:25
1

This is how to create a jQuery live remove listener:

$(document).on('DOMNodeRemoved', function(e)
{
  var $element = $(e.target).find('.element');
  if ($element.length)
  {
    // do anything with $element
  }
});

Or:

$(document).on('DOMNodeRemoved', function(e)
{
  $(e.target).find('.element').each(function()
  {
    // do anything with $(this)
  }
});
1
1

The "remove" event from jQuery works fine, without addition. It might be more reliable in time to use a simple trick, instead of patching jQuery.

Just modify or add an attribute in the element you are about to remove from the DOM. Thus, you can trigger any update function, that will just ignore elements on way to be destroyed, with the attribute "do_not_count_it".

Suppose we have a table with cells corresponding to prices, and that you need to show only the last price: This is the selector to trigger when a price cell is deleted (we have a button in each line of the table doing that, not shown here)

$('td[validity="count_it"]').on("remove", function () {
    $(this).attr("validity","do_not_count_it");
    update_prices();
});

And here is a function that finds the last price in the table, not taking account of the last one, if it was the one that was removed. Indeed, when the "remove" event is triggered, and when this function is called, the element is not removed yet.

function update_prices(){
      var mytable=$("#pricestable");
      var lastpricecell = mytable.find('td[validity="count_it"]').last();
}

In the end, the update_prices() function works fine, and after that, the DOM element is removed.

1

We can also use DOMNodeRemoved:

$("#youridwhichremoved").on("DOMNodeRemoved", function () {
// do stuff
})
3
0

referencing to @David answer:

When You want to do soo with another function, eg. html() like in my case, don't forget to add return in new function:

(function() {
    var ev = new $.Event('html'),
        orig = $.fn.html;
    $.fn.html = function() {
        $(this).trigger(ev);
        return orig.apply(this, arguments);
    }
})();
0

an extension to Adam's answer incase you need to prevend default, here is a work around:

$(document).on('DOMNodeRemoved', function(e){
        if($(e.target).hasClass('my-elm') && !e.target.hasAttribute('is-clone')){
            let clone = $(e.target).clone();
            $(clone).attr('is-clone', ''); //allows the clone to be removed without triggering the function again

            //you can do stuff to clone here (ex: add a fade animation)

            $(clone).insertAfter(e.target);
            setTimeout(() => {
                //optional remove clone after 1 second
                $(clone).remove();
            }, 1000);
        }
    });

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