I'm using jQuery to bind to all links on the page (I'm using the 'click' event, but have tried various combinations of 'mousedown' and 'mouseup',together with bind() and live() to no avail).

I can intercept the click no problem (with all the above methods). What I am trying to do is send some data via a GET request, and when it completes, allow the default click action to proceed.

Since I am communicating accross-domain, I must use GET rather than POST, and so cannot make a synchronous call.

Therefore I have to return 'false' from the intercepted click event, store the event for later, then manually fire it again once the communication has completed. If I return true, the communication gets cut off mid-way as the page location changes.

The problem is, I can't find a way to fire the native click event later on.

var storedEvent;
$("#wrapper a").bind('click', function(event, processed) {
    $(event.target).unbind('click'); // temporary to make code branching easier
    storedEvent = event.target;
    event.stopPropagation();

    $.ajax({
        dataType: 'jsonp',
        data: linkData,
        jsonp: 'cb',
        url: 'xxx',
        cache: false,
        complete: function(response) {
            // How do I now go back and fire the native click event here?
            $(storedEvent).click();
        }
    });
    return false;
}

I've tried using click() and trigger() where indicated, but neither worked.

I know the submission is succeeding, and the code is branching correctly -- I have debugged that far. I just don't seem to be able to replay the event.

Note that I can't do something simple, like store the href and set window.location later -- some of the links have their own onClicks set, while others have varius targets specified. I'd ideally like to just replay the event I stopped earlier.

I started off using event delegation with live() and had everything working, apart from this -- I have simplified it down to a bind() in order to simplify the problem.

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What does the original click event look like? Is that different for everything? – spinon Jul 19 '10 at 3:58
Sometimes it is a specific onclick, sometimes a bound click (e.g. for thickbox/colorbox), sometimes no event -- just a link, but can have various targets (e.g. _top). I managed to get native JavScript dispatchEvent working in firefox -- but I need it to work in IE. Do I have to inspect the element and manually figure out whether to trigger a bound event, or set the (target).location? – Jhong Jul 19 '10 at 4:08
I believe you would have to work it out yourself yes – redsquare Jul 19 '10 at 4:18
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2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You cannot trigger a click event on an anchor and get it to follow the href cross browser.

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I've got further. I didn't realise there was a native JS click() function in IE. It seems to work. So for FF I can do dispatchEvent(). For IE I need to if(hassomethingbound) then fireEvent() else click(). So -- how to find if something is already bound? – Jhong Jul 19 '10 at 4:28
If an inline event is specified, you can check with if(element.onclick) – Anurag Jul 19 '10 at 4:36
yes, but they're not my problem -- what if that element is already bound to with jquery's bind(), live(), or similar? There seems to be no way to be sure what will happen without enumerating all the events on the page... – Jhong Jul 19 '10 at 6:06
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It turns out redsquare is basically correct -- it doesn't work without tearing your hair out.

IE is the problem. dispatchEvent() works fine in FireFox. In IE, you can choose fireEvent to fire any associated events (but not the click), or click() (for clicks but not events), but you can't do both properly.

I got it "almost working" by temporarily changing links' hrefs and targets so that they loaded a blank page in an iframe. I then listened for iframe "load" events to determine if the link's default action had taken place. In IE I could then fire "click" if needed, or "fireEvent" otherwise, after changing the href and target back.

However, it was too much of a hack -- what if one of the links has a bound event that relied on the href attribute being there? (thickbox seemed to carry on working, but I expect it was a race condition).

In the end I didn't need to do it at all anyway ( http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3270120/javascript-jquery-how-to-make-sure-cross-domain-click-tracking-event-succeeds-be ), so I am relieved. It turns out that I had to use POST in this case.

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