I'm using buttons to submit data via Ajax. I'm using jQuery to disable and enable the buttons. This is to prevent "button-mashing," where a user can fire multiple requests either maliciously or unwittingly.
Is there an "element-agnostic" way to prevent this behavior in jQuery? For example, say I wanted to use anchors instead of buttons to submit the data. A button I can disable; but as far as I know you can not disable anchors.
Here is how I'm doing this now: (note I've removed some of the unnecessary code to make it shorter)
$('.fav .button').click(function() {
$.ajax({
context: this,
dataType: 'json',
beforeSend: function() {
// Toggle state; disable button to prevent button mashing
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", true);
},
error: function() {
// Rollback state and re-enable button on error
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
},
success: function(response) {
if (response.result == "success") {
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
}
else {
// Rollback state; re-enable button
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
}
}
});
return false;
});
HTML:
<input class="button" type="button" value="">