I have a list within lists. When a user clicks on a list item (<li>), I want the nested <ul> to show up. Before I started adding the nested lists, I just had it where clicking a list item would run a function. Now, clicking any of the nested lists also runs that function. Which makes sense, since they're part of the list item.

Besides wrapping a <span> around the first part of the list item and running the function on that, is there a selector that will let me run something on the parent <li> but not any of its children, specifically not the child lists and list items?

HTML:

<ul class="buckets">        
    <li class="bucket">
        <img src="arrow_group_collapsed_true.png" class="arrow">
        <img src="blue_folder.png" class="folder">
        View all
    </li>

    <li class="bucket">
        <img src="arrow_group_collapsed_false.png" class="arrow">
        <img src="blue_folder.png" class="folder">
        Groups
        <ul style="display: block;">
            <li id="group_id_15036" class="group_bucket">
                <img src="arrow_group_collapsed_true.png" class="arrow">
                <img src="blue_folder.png" class="folder">
                Group 1
            </li>
            <li id="group_id_14910" class="group_bucket">
                <img src="arrow_group_collapsed_true.png" class="arrow">
                <img src="blue_folder.png" class="folder">
                Group 2
            </li>
        </ul>
    </li>
</ul>

Javascript (not much of it, I can show more if needed):

$( 'li.bucket' ).live( 'click',
    function()
    {
        // do stuff
    })

I want a click on "Groups" or "View All" to run the click function, but a click on "Group 1" or "Group 2" should not.

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3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

There's an official way, but in your case, it might be rather expensive:

$('li.bucket *').live('click', function(event) { event.stopPropagation() });

The li's children will now have a handler that stops the event from propagating upwards and triggering the li's handler. Please try it and see if the application isn't slowed down too much.

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So if a user clicks on anything like li.bucket li, what would happen here? – hookedonwinter Jul 27 '10 at 17:48
Nothing. Isn't that the intended behaviour? – MvanGeest Jul 27 '10 at 17:49
Ya, I just wanted to make sure. Can I then override that? I do want things to happen when I click the deeper links, I just don't want the function to fire on the top one as well. If that makes sense. – hookedonwinter Jul 27 '10 at 17:50
Essentially, I want the click function to run on all li's, but I want it to run on the li actually clicked, not a parent li. – hookedonwinter Jul 27 '10 at 17:51
Yes, you can override (well, actually, complement) that and it will work. The only thing that this code accomplishes is that none of the parents' click handlers will be triggered. Sounds like it's just what you want. – MvanGeest Jul 27 '10 at 17:51
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you can control the above function onmouseover the list item & remove it onmouseout event of the item. But I don't know about how efficient it would be against other ways though.

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Cool idea. MvanGeest's worked, but good thinking :) – hookedonwinter Jul 27 '10 at 18:03
Hehe actually these ideas come when I'm too lazy to write a jQuery code...pretty easy to help people by just giving them the idea than code :p – loxxy Jul 27 '10 at 18:16
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I like @MvanGeest's solution but there is a better way by understanding the event propagation. When an element is clicked the contained elements get the event first and trickle up through the tree. If I understand your request you would like to prevent the contained ul sending events up the tree. I think here a visual is best.

<ul>
  <li></li>
  <li onclick="ShowChildUL()">
    <ul onclick="function(event) { event.stopPropagation() }">
      <li onclick="DoSomethingFun()"></li>
      <li></li>
      </ul>
  </li>
</ul>

In this case you will see that the onclick on the ul in the middle will stop propagation up to the li. Also event.stopPropagation() is not cross browser. I recommend this method as your onclick function.

function StopPropagation(e) {
  var event = e || window.event;

  [body of event handler function goes here]

  if (event.stopPropagation) {
    event.stopPropagation();
  } else {
    event.cancelBubble = true;
  } 
}
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