3

I've asked this question in several places, and I'm now casting the widest possible net to see if there is a resolution I can use. Given the following HTML:

<select id="test">
  <option value="">Select One...</option>
  <option value="1">One</option>
  <option value="2">Two</option>
</select>

and the following jQuery event binding:

$("#test").change(function( event ) {
  console.log("Changed");
});

I would like to be able to have the change event triggered using only DOM methods. That is, I do not want to call the jQuery .change() or .trigger() methods to cause the jQuery change event to be triggered. This is within the context of a browser automation framework, which needs to automate selection of options from <select> elements on any page, and thus cannot rely on jQuery being loaded in any particular page. Furthermore, we are only interested in a solution for this problem with IE, as we are only having difficulty with that browser. Also note, that we need a solution that will work for all versions of IE from 6-9. I would like to do something like the following (deliberately IE-specific code follows):

var e = document.getElementById('test');
e.item(1).selected = true;
e.fireEvent("onchange"); // What needs to happen here to get the jQuery event to fire?

This, however, does not cause the jQuery event to be triggered. You can find a full working example of this particular issue at this link. What is the specific code I have to invoke to get this to work?

1 Answer 1

4

You could do:

var e = document.getElementById('test');
var evt = document.createEvent("HTMLEvents");
    evt.initEvent("change", true, true);
    e.dispatchEvent(evt);

fiddle here http://jsfiddle.net/a5DUE/7/ (works for me in IE9)

4
  • Nice idea, but support for createEvent() was only added in IE9. Is there a similar method (like maybe createEventObject()) that will work for previous versions?
    – JimEvans
    Sep 1, 2011 at 15:07
  • The only other way i know is with e.fireEvent("onchange"); (which doesn't work for me on IE9 so i thought that was the browser you had trouble with) Sep 1, 2011 at 15:13
  • No, we're actually having trouble with all versions of IE. I'll edit the question to make that more clear.
    – JimEvans
    Sep 1, 2011 at 15:22
  • The fully working code is available at the link in the original question (jsfiddle.net/a5DUE). This answer put me down the right path.
    – JimEvans
    Sep 1, 2011 at 16:15

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