44

When I use jQuery for a simple click event it only works for links. Is there a way to make it work for spans etc:

$("span.clicked").live("click", function(e){alert("span clicked!")});

$("a.clicked").live("click", function(e){alert("link clicked!")});

The SPAN works in Safari but not Mobile Safari (on iPhone or iPad) whereas the A tag works in both.

1
  • I think the answer should be changed to stackoverflow.com/a/4910962/16940 by Plynx and not the current answer from Sam. Plynx's answer definitely has the votes and the support.
    – cdpalmer
    Sep 14, 2018 at 17:14

8 Answers 8

130

I struggled with this as well. After lots of toying around and trying to figure out the problem, I came across a simple solution.

If you set the element's cursor to pointer, it magically works again with Jquery's live and the click event. This can just be set globally in the CSS.

7
  • 1
    Been searching for a fix like this for months thanks. I has come up with iphone/pod/pad detection and changing click events to other events just for those devices. This is much better.
    – danmayer
    Nov 29, 2011 at 16:02
  • 6
    note that it won't work if you do cursor: pointer; on hover.
    – pseudosudo
    Apr 1, 2013 at 21:23
  • @pseudosudo can you elaborate? there's no hover on a ipad - or are you talking about this breaking desktop versions in some respect, or 'Samsung hover on Galaxy S4' ? Jul 5, 2013 at 13:53
  • 3
    @Simon_Weaver div:hover { cursor: pointer; } doesn't work, just do div { cursor: pointer; }
    – pseudosudo
    Jul 6, 2013 at 21:31
  • CSS Cursor:Pointer; is a great solution. FastClick github.com/ftlabs/fastclick is another solution.
    – Milk Man
    Aug 27, 2014 at 23:00
28

You need to listen for the "touchstart" and "touchend" events. Add the listeners with jQuery...

$('span').bind( "touchstart", function(e){alert('Span Clicked!')} );

You may wish to listen for a touchstart and touchend so that you can verify that the element targeted when the finger touched is the same as the element targeted when the finger was removed.

I'm sure there is probably a better way to do it but that should work :)

Edit: There is a better way! See https://stackoverflow.com/a/4910962/16940

8
  • Thanks. Does this mean that iPhone ignores click events except to links (perhaps because of the other possible gestures) ?
    – Gazzer
    Jun 12, 2010 at 6:40
  • I think that because <a /> tags work the way they do i.e. they're there to be clicked - mobile webkit handles the click event on them automatically. I don't know this for sure. It's just an assumption
    – Sam
    Jun 14, 2010 at 20:43
  • You are missing a closing parenthesis. Should be $('span').bind( "touchstart", function(e){alert('Span Clicked!')});
    – mhenry1384
    Jul 17, 2012 at 19:09
  • 1
    Thanks, this is working for spans, divs and buttons but not for image tag.. Please suggest Sep 2, 2013 at 17:05
  • 4
    NO NO NO NO (almost certainly) - see @Plynx's answer Sep 16, 2014 at 15:30
21

You actually don't need to use the touchstart or touchend event, so long as the 'span' tag (or anything other than an 'a' tag) has a css property of:

cursor:pointer

the click will register

0
2

You can also coax the browser to generate click events by adding an empty onclick attribute. For a belt-and-braces approach in case either approach stops working in any given iOS update, you could use something like this:

$("span.clicked").live("click", function(e){alert("span clicked!")})
                 .attr('onclick','')
                 .css('cursor','pointer');

(assuming you don't have any actual onclick attributes you don't mind obliterating)

2

You can add an empty onclick attribute, like so:

<span onclick=''>Touch or Click Me</span>
jQuery('span').live('click', function() { alert('foo'); });
1

I tried everything and none of the tricks worked. It turned out I couldn't get click events because I had a video element under my img. video elements apparently eat click events.

2
  • I have the same problem. The video tag underneath is the issue. Did you solve this?
    – Yoh Suzuki
    Jul 2, 2013 at 21:05
  • I think I ended up hiding (display: none) the video element. It seemed to be the only way.
    – mhenry1384
    Jul 7, 2013 at 16:08
1

When targeting iOS you have to take the following into consideration: doing event delegation in jQuery like $(document).on('click', '.target-element', function (event) {...}); will not work. You have to add either onclick="" to the target HTML element or cursor: pointer to its styles.

Taken and adapted from http://gravitydept.com/blog/js-click-event-bubbling-on-ios:

It turns out that Safari on the iPhone does not support event delegation for click events, unless the click takes place on a link or input. Fortunately there are workarounds available.

That's the reason while the <a> tag works while <span> doesn't.

0

My approach to solve this misunderstanding on document.click.

  1. Add into html after tag body next tag

    <body> <div id="overlaySection" onclick="void(0)"></div> ... </body>

  2. Some style for that tag

    `#overlaySection {
      position: fixed;
      top: 0;
      left: 0;
      z-index: 1;
      width: 100%;
      height: 100%;
      background: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0);
      cursor: pointer;
      visibility: hidden;
      opacity: 0;
      content: "";
    }
    #overlaySection.active {
     opacity: 1;
     visibility: visible;
    }`
    
  3. Some JQuery staff

    // hide overlay on document click $('#overlaySection').click(function(){ $(this).removeClass('active'); });

and the main thing to active this overlay

$('.dropdown > span').click(function() {
    ...
    $('#overlaySection').addClass('active');
    ...
});

Hope this approach will be useful to someone. Happy coding!

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