It depends on how the events are attached. For illustration presume we have the following click handler:
var handler = function() { alert('clicked!') };
We're going to attach it to our element using different methods, some which allow inspection and some that don't.
Method A) single event handler
element.onclick = handler;
// inspect
alert(element.onclick); // alerts "function() { alert('clicked!') }"
Method B) multiple event handlers
if(element.addEventListener) { // DOM standard
element.addEventListener('click', handler, false)
} else if(element.attachEvent) { // IE
element.attachEvent('onclick', handler)
}
// cannot inspect element to find handlers
Method C): jQuery.
$(element).click(handler);
// inspect
var clickEvents = jQuery.data(element, "events").click;
// equivalently: jQuery(element).data("events").click
jQuery.each(clickEvents, function(key, value) {
alert(value) // alerts "function() { alert('clicked!') }"
})
(See jQuery.data and jQuery.fn.data)
Method D): Prototype (messy)
$(element).observe('click', handler);
1.5.x:
// inspect Event.observers.each(function(item) { if(item[0] == element) { alert(item[2]) // alerts "function() { alert('clicked!') }" } })1.6 to 1.6.0.3, inclusive (got very difficult here)
// inspect. "_eventId" is for < 1.6.0.3 while // "_prototypeEventID" was introduced in 1.6.0.3 var clickEvents = Event.cache[element._eventId || (element._prototypeEventID || [])[0]].click; clickEvents.each(function(wrapper){ alert(wrapper.handler) // alerts "function() { alert('clicked!') }" })1.6.1 (little better)
// inspect var clickEvents = element.getStorage().get('prototype_event_registry').get('click'); clickEvents.each(function(wrapper){ alert(wrapper.handler) // alerts "function() { alert('clicked!') }" })
