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In my Rails App, I have a javascript Timer in one page. When using turbolinks, the Timer object would persist between pages.

So, when user starts the timer in the timer.html.erb and go to another page and change back, the timer is still running(persistes), instead of starting again.

I'd like to show you my example. But where to put it? JS fiddle? Heroku?

Notice: I've tried that, if I turn the turbo links off, everthing would be fine.

1 Answer 1

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Instead of removing Turbolinks, I would use their events to reload the timer each time the page loads:

#app/assets/javascripts/application.js
var timer = function() {
    //timer init
};

$(document).ready(timer);
$(document).on('page:load', timer);
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    But by calling timer twice, We'll start the clock twice. How to solve this?
    – ZK Zhao
    Feb 28, 2014 at 8:48
  • Have you tested it? The document.ready initiates the timer when you load the timer & page:load refreshes. You could just get rid of the $(document).ready call if it's calling twice Feb 28, 2014 at 9:13
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    Sure - you can just use a condition inside the timer function. The page:load is just a turbolinks event, meaning you should put any logic into the function you're looking to call Feb 28, 2014 at 12:18
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    Then I would put a <div id="js-customIdentifier">, and use js to check for its existence for cutsomFunction. Is this a good practice? Or what is a good practice?
    – ZK Zhao
    Feb 28, 2014 at 12:26
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    Yep, that's what I would do to begin with -- you might be able to reference the location or something, but bottom line is you need some sort of identifying element (either in URL or in HTML) Feb 28, 2014 at 12:39

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