jQuery 1.7's .on() and .off() methods are supposed to replace .live() and such.

I tried it with a dynamic item:

 $(".myList").on('click', function(e){
  alert('hello world');
 });

This is not working for me for elements added after DOM is loaded.

Is code above a valid example for jQuery 1.7's .on() and .off() methods?

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2 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

See http://blog.jquery.com/2011/11/03/jquery-1-7-released/ for live() -> on/off() (and other) examples.

This is their example for converting live to on:

$('a').live('click', fn);
$(document).on('click', 'a', fn);

So your example becomes to:

$(document).on('click', '.myList', function(e){
  alert('hello world');
});
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Something to realize though. on() does not work with dynamically created elements that are appended to the body AND have have a negative z-index. For whatever reason, the click never traverses past the body containing element. The body tag will keep catching all clicks. Even if you make the body a z-index lower than the element being added to the DOM. HOWEVER live() DOES have the power to target these negatively indexed items even though on() cannot. – Alex May 25 at 14:01
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Here is a little example:

http://jsfiddle.net/zzSjK/

<script type="text/javascript">
    $(function(){
        $(document).on('click','.clickme' , function(e){
          addtext()
        });
        function addtext() {
            $('.myList').append('<div class="clickme">click me</div>')
        }
    })
</script>

<div class="myList">
    <div class="clickme">-click-</div>
</div>
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