up vote 4 down vote favorite
2
share [g+] share [fb]

I have some elements on a page which are draggable. These same elements have a click event which navigates to another page. I'm trying to determine the best way of preventing the click event from firing if the user is dragging but still allow the click event if not dragging. Anyone have any ideas of the best way to accomplish this?

link|improve this question

67% accept rate
feedback

4 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

I solved this by using something like the following:

new Draggable('id', {
    onStart: function() {
        dPhoto = $('id');
        Event.stopObserving('id', 'click');
    },
    onEnd : function() {
        setTimeout("Event.observe('id', 'click', function() { location.href = 'url'; });", 500);
    },
    revert: true
});
link|improve this answer
Could you actually save the click event to reattach again afterwards? – mercutio Nov 11 '08 at 15:12
feedback

Something like the following might do the trick (and prevent the click event to be fired up)

new Draggable('tag',  
    {
        revert:function()
        {
            $('tag').onclick = function(){return false;};
            setTimeout('$(\'tag\').onclick = function(){return true;}','500');  
            return true;
        }
    }
);
link|improve this answer
Thanks, but this didn't quite work. It prevents the click event from happening even after the timeout. Seems like there should be a cleaner solution. – digitalsanctum Nov 8 '08 at 17:38
I agree. I was worth a shot. – VonC Nov 8 '08 at 17:57
feedback
var click_func;
function onDragStart(drgObj,mouseEvent){
    click_func = mouseEvent.target.onclick;

    mouseEvent.target.onclick = function(e){
    	mouseEvent.target.onclick = click_func;
    	return false;
    }
}
link|improve this answer
feedback

You can also do this another way. On your startDrag you stop observing the object. Then you observe the click again which leads to an enddrag function which recreates the first eventhandler.

function onDragStart() {
    Event.stopObserving(this.OBJECT,'click');
    Event.observe(this.OBJECT,'click',this.onDragEnd.bindAsEventListener(this));
}

function onDragEnd() {
    Event.stopObserving(this.OBJECT,'click');
    Event.observe(this.OBJECT,'click',this.PREVIOUSFUNCTION.bindAsEventListener(this));
}

This will catch the leftover click event which is still active after the enddrag to just recreate the original handler. I hope this helps somebody out there :)

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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