I'm struggling to determine why the addition of a new jQuery click function is preventing an existing AJAX call I had from working properly (NOTE: I've double-checked and isolated the addition of the new function as the cause).

The context of the situation is that I have a page which gives the user a word problem, times the user's response and then uses an AJAX call to process the user's answer and display additional suggested answers. This functionality all works. However, when I tweaked my code so that the timer would not begin until after the user clicked a start button (before the timer began when the page loaded), the AJAX code stopped working.

My question is: why would the AJAX call work with the original jQuery timer but not the tweaked jQuery timer code.

Any insights would be greatly appreciated!

Here is the original timer jQuery:

    var count = 0;
    var interval = setInterval(function(){ 
    $('#timer').html(count + ' secs.');
        count++;
    },1000);

Here is the new timer jQuery that has the added click function:

$('#start_answer').click(function(){
    var count = 0;
    var interval = setInterval(function(){ 
        $('#timer').html(count + ' secs.');
        count++;
        },1000);
    $('.cluster_a').addClass("answer_highlight");
    $('.cluster_q').addClass("question_unhighlight");

});

Here is the AJAX call:

        $('#process_structure').live('click', function () {
        var postData = $('#inputs_structure').serializeArray();
        postData.push({name: 'count', value: count});
        $('#testing').fadeOut('slow');
        $.ajax ({
            type: "POST",
            url: "structure_process.php",
            data: $.param(postData),
            success: function(text){
                $('#testing').fadeIn('500', function(){
                    $('#testing').html(text);
                })
            }
        });

        $(this).parent().html('<a class="right_next" href="/structure.php">Do another</a>');

        clearInterval(interval);
        return false;
    })

HTML it's applied to:

        <div class="problem" id="testing"> <!-- create main problem container -->
        <div class="cluster_q">
            <div class="title"><?php if($switch){; echo $_SESSION['title']; ?></div>
                <div class="summary"><?php echo $_SESSION['problem']; ?></div>
                    <div class="extras"><?php echo 'Categories: ' . $_SESSION['category'][0] . ' | Source: <a href="' . $_SESSION['source'][1] . '">' . $_SESSION['source'][0] . '</a>'; ?> <!--<a href="http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/06/gm-invests-5-million-in-powermat-says-wireless-charging-headed/">Engadget blog post</a>--></div>
            <button id="start_answer">start</button>
        </div>
                    <form method="POST" id="inputs_structure"> 
                        <div class="cluster_a" id="tree_container">
                            <?php acceptTreeTest($num); ?>
                        </div>

                        <table class="basic" id="new_bucket">
                            <tr>
                                <td class="td_alt"></td>
                                <td class="td_alt"><a href="#" id="add_bucket" class="extras">add bucket</a></td>
                                <td class="td_alt"></td>
                            </tr>
                        </table>
                    </form>
        <?php } else{; ?>
            <p>Whoa! You've done every single structure question. Nice work!</p>
            <a href="/structure.php">Start going through them again</a>
            </div> <!-- extra /div close to close the divs if the page goes through the else statement -->
            </div> <!-- extra /div close to close the divs if the page goes through the else statement -->
        <?php }; ?>      
    </div> <!-- closes problem container -->
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Can you add the HTML on which this is applied. – Balanivash Jun 17 '11 at 17:22
Sure, just added. – john k Jun 17 '11 at 17:28
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2 Answers

up vote 0 down vote accepted

You need to declare the interval and count variables outside of the click handlers so that they are in scope for the push and clearInterval() invocations in your code.

var count = 0;
var interval;
$('#start_answer').click(function(){
    interval = setInterval(function(){
        $('#timer').html(count + ' secs.'); 
        // rest of code


$('#process_structure').live('click', function () {
    var postData = $('#inputs_structure').serializeArray();
    postData.push({name: 'count', value: count});
    ...
    clearInterval(interval);
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Yea, that makes total sense. Worked perfectly! thanks for the help, much appreciated! – john k Jun 17 '11 at 17:32
counts going to be need to be moved outside the click handler as well ;) – Patricia Jun 17 '11 at 17:32
@Patricia - Thanks, edited that in before you commented :) – karim79 Jun 17 '11 at 17:37
ahh the joys of looking at a stale page :) – Patricia Jun 17 '11 at 17:38
feedback

It's hard to tell exactly what you're trying to do but in the second code snippet the interval is in a closure and it's not externally accessible. In the first example, it looks like interval is a global. I'm guessing when you call clearInterval in the AJAX call there is no interval variable available.

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