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The code below works on a live site but I can't get it to run on jsfiddle.net . See http://jsfiddle.net/mjmitche/afPrc/

Can anyone tell me why it's not working on jsfiddle?

<form action="" method="post">
    <select multiple="multiple" name="Select1" id="theList" style="width: 152px; height: 226px">
    </select>
<br />
    <input name="Button1" type="button" value="Fill The List" onclick="fillList()" />
    <input name="Button4" onclick="mySelectList.clear()" type="button" value="Clear The List" /><br />
    <input name="Button2" onclick="alert(mySelectList.getCount())" type="button" value="What's The Count?" /><br />
    <input name="Text1" type="text" id="txtToFind"/><input name="Button3" type="button" value="Search" onclick="findIt()" /></form>



function BetterSelect(oSelList) {
    this.objSelectList = oSelList;
    this.objSelectList.onchange = this.selectionChanged;
}
BetterSelect.prototype.clear = function() {
    this.objSelectList.options.length = 0;
}
BetterSelect.prototype.fill = function(aValues) {
    this.clear();
    for (var i=0; i < aValues.length; i++) {
        this.objSelectList.options[i] = new Option(aValues[i]);
    }
}
BetterSelect.prototype.find = function(strToFind,bSelect) {
    var indx = -1;
    this.objSelectList.options.selectedIndex = -1;
    for (var i=0; i<this.getCount(); i++) {
        if (this.objSelectList.options[i].text == strToFind) {
            indx = i;
            if (bSelect)
                this.objSelectList.options.selectedIndex = i;
        }
    }
    return indx;
}
BetterSelect.prototype.getCount = function() {
    return this.objSelectList.options.length;
}
BetterSelect.prototype.selectionChanged = function() {
    alert("selection changed!");
}

var mySelectList = null;
window.onload = function() {
    mySelectList = new BetterSelect(document.getElementById('theList'));
}
function fillList() {
    mySelectList.fill(["one","two","three","four","five"]);
}
function findIt() {
    mySelectList.find(document.getElementById('txtToFind').value, true);
}
share|improve this question
see also the possible duplicate Simple example doesn't work on JSFiddle – Bergi Mar 11 at 16:05

2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

The functions you define are defined in an onload function, so whereas before they were referenceable, because they are defined in that function they can only be referenced from within that function. You reference them as globals in your HTML. You have three options

a) ( easiest, quickest, not ideal ) - change function blah(){} to window.blah = function(){}; making the functions global.

b) ( ideal way ) - use unobtrusive Javascript to attach behaviour to DOM elements from within the JS solely, meaning separate HTML from JS.

c) Make the jsfiddle not wrap the stuff onload. Change onLoad to no wrap ( body or head ).

So instead of <p onclick="lol()" id="foo"> you'd do var e = document.getElementById('foo'); e.onclick = lol; in the JS only.

I recommend b as it encourages best practices.

share|improve this answer
thank you. how is it then that the code works on a live site? – Leahcim Mar 29 '11 at 5:45
1  
Because the functions are not defined within another function on the live site. The jsfiddle throws your JS inside a function. View source on fiddle.jshell.net/mjmitche/afPrc/show – meder Mar 29 '11 at 5:46
thank you very much for your help – Leahcim Mar 29 '11 at 6:16

In your fiddle select no wrap (head) in the dropdown on the left, click Run and it will work.

See example →

When onLoad is selected your functions are defined within the closure of the $(document).ready(function() {}); only.

share|improve this answer
2  
thank you very much – Leahcim Mar 29 '11 at 6:17

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