137

I am binding a click event with a button:

$('#myButton').bind('click',  onButtonClicked);

In one scenario, this is getting called multiple times, so when I do a trigger I see multiple ajax calls which I want to prevent.

How do I bind only if its not bound before.

2
  • 1
    Man, I think +Konrad Garus has the safest anwser (stackoverflow.com/a/6930078/842768), consider changing your accepted answer. Cheers! UPDATE: Check +Herbert Peters' comment as well! That's the best approach. Aug 2, 2016 at 12:57
  • For current standards, see @A Morel's answer below (stackoverflow.com/a/50097988/1163705). Less coding and takes all the guess work, algorithms and/or searching for existing elements out of the equation.
    – Xandor
    Apr 25, 2019 at 20:38

13 Answers 13

187

One more way - mark such buttons with a CSS class and filter:

$('#myButton:not(.bound)').addClass('bound').bind('click',  onButtonClicked);

In recent jQuery versions replace bind with on:

$('#myButton:not(.bound)').addClass('bound').on('click',  onButtonClicked);
6
  • 4
    Excellent! Thanks Konrad, this hits the sweet spot. I love elegant and simple approaches like this. I am pretty sure it is more performant as well, as every single element (which already has click events handlers attached) does not have to do a full search in some big events bucket comparing each one. In my implementation I named the added helper class "click-bound", which I think is a more maintainable option: $(".list-item:not(.click-bound)").addClass("click-bound"); Sep 19, 2012 at 15:53
  • 1
    As was stated in the accepted answer: "It would be best, of course, if you could structure your application so this code only gets called once." This accomplishes that.
    – Jeff Dege
    Jan 21, 2014 at 19:39
  • +1 in my situation, off/on and bind/unbind did prevent multiple calls. This was the solution that worked.
    – Jay
    Jun 27, 2014 at 15:02
  • 2
    This is the better solution for performance because the code can check for the presence of the CSS class and slip binding of already present. Other solution execute an unbind-then-rebind process with (at least fr4om what I can tell) more overhead. Apr 9, 2015 at 21:01
  • 1
    2 issues. (when using it in a plug-in that can be bound to several elements) Will not work when binding a resize event to the window object. Use data( 'bound', 1 ) instead of addClass ('bound') is another approach that works. When destroying the event it might do so while other instances depend on it. So checking if other instances are still in use is advisable. Sep 23, 2015 at 0:31
120

Update 24 Aug '12: In jQuery 1.8, it is no longer possible to access the element's events using .data('events'). (See this bug for details.) It is possible to access the same data with jQuery._data(elem, 'events'), an internal data structure, which is undocumented and therefore not 100% guaranteed to remain stable. This shouldn't, however, be a problem, and the relevant line of the plugin code above can be changed to the following:

var data = jQuery._data(this[0], 'events')[type];

jQuery events are stored in a data object called events, so you could search in this:

var button = $('#myButton');
if (-1 !== $.inArray(onButtonClicked, button.data('events').click)) {
    button.click(onButtonClicked);
}

It would be best, of course, if you could structure your application so this code only gets called once.


This could be encapsulated into a plugin:

$.fn.isBound = function(type, fn) {
    var data = this.data('events')[type];

    if (data === undefined || data.length === 0) {
        return false;
    }

    return (-1 !== $.inArray(fn, data));
};

You could then call:

var button = $('#myButton');
if (!button.isBound('click', onButtonClicked)) {
    button.click(onButtonClicked);
}
8
  • 10
    +1 for the edit. Readging this post today and i'm using 1.8. Thx.
    – Gigi2m02
    Aug 24, 2012 at 9:35
  • 2
    Thanks for edit. Is this only for buttons or could I also use it for <a>? Because when i try it says on jQuery._data() the following error TypeError: a is undefined
    – Houman
    Sep 6, 2012 at 11:37
  • I would wrap the line var data = jQuery._data(this[0], 'events')[type]; in a try catch and return false in the catch. If no events are bound to this[0] than a call to [type] will cause some variation of "Unable to get property 'click' of undefined or null reference" and obviously that also tells you what you need to know. Jan 10, 2014 at 3:19
  • I am not sure if the _data object changed in jQuery 2.0.3 but I could not use $.inArray for this. The function you want to compare is in a property of each data item called "handler". I modified it to use a simple for statement and checked for string equivalence, what I'm assume inArray did. for (var i = 0; i < data.length; i++) { if (data[i].handler.toString() === fn.toString()) { return true; } } Jan 10, 2014 at 21:26
  • why not move your update/edit to the top?... It's the actual correct answer. Aug 8, 2016 at 18:09
66

If using jQuery 1.7+:

You can call off before on:

$('#myButton').off('click', onButtonClicked) // remove handler
              .on('click', onButtonClicked); // add handler

If not:

You can just unbind it first event:

$('#myButton').unbind('click', onButtonClicked) //remove handler
              .bind('click', onButtonClicked);  //add handler
8
  • 1
    This isn't exactly a lovely solution, but it would be improved by only unbinding the one handler: .unbind('click', onButtonClicked). See the manual Jun 15, 2011 at 17:08
  • 16
    You can actually namespace your handlers as you add them, then unbinding becomes pretty simple. $(sel).unbind("click.myNamespace");
    – Marc
    Jun 15, 2011 at 17:11
  • @lonesomeday was your example using 'unbind' meant to show anything different? Isn't .unbind effectively the same as .off so you'd have to write $('#myButton').unbind('click', onButtonClicked).bind('click', onButtonClicked);
    – Jim
    Jan 7, 2015 at 12:44
  • 1
    @Jim You'll see the question was edited three years after my comment! (And also in the minutes immediately after my comment. The content that I was commenting on no longer exists, which is why it probably doesn't seem to make much sense.) Jan 7, 2015 at 13:08
  • @lonesomeday hmmm I am not sure why it was edited, do you think I should rollback?
    – Naftali
    Jan 7, 2015 at 13:44
9

I wrote a very tiny plugin called "once" which do that. Execute off and on in element.

$.fn.once = function(a, b) {
    return this.each(function() {
        $(this).off(a).on(a,b);
    });
};

And simply:

$(element).once('click', function(){
});
4
  • 9
    .one() will drop the handler after the first execution. Jan 8, 2015 at 11:24
  • 3
    here "once" is for attaching a handler once. "one" in jquery is for running once not attaching once. Apr 6, 2016 at 13:55
  • 1
    I know I'm coming in way after the fact, but doesn't off remove all handlers for the given type? Meaning if there was a separate click handler unrelated but on the same item, wouldn't that one get removed as well?
    – Xandor
    Apr 25, 2019 at 20:19
  • just use a namespace on the event so it doesn't drop all handlers like: 'keypup.test123' May 29, 2019 at 5:54
8

The best way I see is to use live() or delegate() to capture the event in a parent and not in each child element.

If your button is inside a #parent element, you can replace:

$('#myButton').bind('click', onButtonClicked);

by

$('#parent').delegate('#myButton', 'click', onButtonClicked);

even if #myButton doesn't exist yet when this code is executed.

1
  • 3
    Deprecated methods
    – dobs
    Nov 27, 2017 at 15:33
8

Why not use this

unbind() before bind()

$('#myButton').unbind().bind('click',  onButtonClicked);
3
  • 3
    $('#myButton').off().on('click', onButtonClicked); also works for me. Apr 3, 2019 at 5:12
  • Works for me...gr8 solution
    – imdadhusen
    Apr 19, 2019 at 9:39
  • Beautiful. Works perfectly for me for a button that was already bound. Jan 8, 2020 at 17:03
3

Here's my version:

Utils.eventBoundToFunction = function (element, eventType, fCallback) {
    if (!element || !element.data('events') || !element.data('events')[eventType] || !fCallback) {
        return false;
    }

    for (runner in element.data('events')[eventType]) {
        if (element.data('events')[eventType][runner].handler == fCallback) {
            return true;
        }

    }

    return false;
};

Usage:

Utils.eventBoundToFunction(okButton, 'click', handleOkButtonFunction)
3

To avoid to check/bind/unbind, you can change your approach! Why don't you use Jquery .on() ?

Since Jquery 1.7, .live(), .delegate() is deprecated, now you can use .on() to

Attach an event handler for all elements which match the current selector, now and in the future

It means that you can attach an event to a parent element that is still existing and attach children elements whether they are present or not!

When you use .on() like this:

$('#Parent').on('click', '#myButton'  onButtonClicked);

You catch event click on parent and it search child '#myButton' if exists...

So when you remove or add a child element, you do not have to worry about whether to add or remove the event binding.

1
  • This absolutely is the best answer on here for current standards. I don't think this feature of setting the handler on the parent to watch for the child has been well advertised but is a rather elegant solution. I was having an event fire multiple times and each time the total amount of times it fired kept increasing. This single line did the entire trick and without using .off which I believe would remove unrelated handlers in the process.
    – Xandor
    Apr 25, 2019 at 20:36
2

Based on @konrad-garus answer, but using data, since I believe class should be used mostly for styling.

if (!el.data("bound")) {
  el.data("bound", true);
  el.on("event", function(e) { ... });
}
1

Try:

if (typeof($("#myButton").click) != "function") 
{
   $("#myButton").click(onButtonClicked);
}
0
0
if ($("#btn").data('events') != undefined && $("#btn").data('events').click != undefined) {
    //do nothing as the click event is already there
} else {
    $("#btn").click(function (e) {
        alert('test');
    });
}
0

As of June 2019, I've updated the function (and it's working for what I need)

$.fn.isBound = function (type) {
    var data = $._data($(this)[0], 'events');

    if (data[type] === undefined || data.length === 0) {
        return false;
    }
    return true;
};
-3

JQuery has solution:

$( "#foo" ).one( "click", function() {
  alert( "This will be displayed only once." );
}); 

equivalent:

$( "#foo" ).on( "click", function( event ) {
  alert( "This will be displayed only once." );
  $( this ).off( event );
});
2
  • 1
    Your answer is not related to question. Question is about binding function to element's event only once. Nov 11, 2016 at 20:34
  • you did not read the question
    – Oluwatumbi
    Feb 3, 2022 at 17:42

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