11

I have a keydown event handler that I attach to my document so I can watch the keydown event everywhere. However, after a condition is met, I want to be able to remove that and only that handler. How can I do this?

This is my current handler:

    $(document).keydown(function(event){
        console.log(event);

        var tag = event.target.tagName.toLowerCase();
        if(event.which = 27 && tag != 'input' && tag != 'textarea'){    //escape has been pressed
            _dismissModal(modal_id);
        }
    });

I want to remove this keydown event handler after _dismissModal is called. How can I do this without removing all keydown event handlers?

1
  • did you try jqueries off() method? Jan 28, 2014 at 20:21

6 Answers 6

6

you can use jquery off() method. You also could put your keydown logic in to a separate function so you only can target that keydown action in your off method.

var mykeydownfunction= function(){
    console.log(event);

    var tag = event.target.tagName.toLowerCase();
    if(event.which = 27 && tag != 'input' && tag != 'textarea'){    //escape has been pressed
        _dismissModal(modal_id);
        $(this).off('keydown', mykeydownfunction);// $(this) is the document
    }
}  

 $(document).on('keydown', mykeydownfunction);
6

Use .off() to remove the event handler.

$(document).on("keydown", function(event){
    console.log(event);

    var tag = event.target.tagName.toLowerCase();
    if(event.which = 27 && tag != 'input' && tag != 'textarea'){    //escape has been pressed
        _dismissModal(modal_id);
        $(this).off("keydown");
    }
});
3
  • Will that remove all keydown event handlers or just mine?
    – Malfist
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:23
  • 1
    I want to remove only mine.
    – Malfist
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:29
  • Then @kasper Taeymans has provided you with your solution - just use a named function as opposed to an anonymous one. Jan 28, 2014 at 20:32
3

This has been answered already but using namespaces with removing events is really helpful and makes sure you don't cause any side effects.

// add click event with my.namespace as the namespace
$('element').on('click.my.namespace', function (e) {
    // do something
});

// remove my.namespace click event from element
$('element').off('click.my.namespace');

You can open up the dev console and look at the events of an element with

$._data($('element')[0], 'events');

Open up the Object and you will see a click array. Expand your event and you will see the namespace actually shows up as

namespace.my

and not

my.namespace

http://api.jquery.com/on/

Search for Event names and namespaces for more info.

0
2

When the condition is met, use .off()

$(document).off('keydown');
3
  • Will that remove all keydown event handlers or just mine?
    – Malfist
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:25
  • @Malfist - this will remove all keydown event handlers. Jan 28, 2014 at 20:26
  • see my answer to only remove a specific keydown action. @Krishna: no worries mate :-) Jan 28, 2014 at 20:32
2

Use .off()

 $(document).off('keydown');
2
  • Will that remove all keydown event handlers or just mine?
    – Malfist
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:26
  • @Malfist, all events of that type (both direct and delegated) are removed from the elements (here document) in the jQuery set
    – Satpal
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:27
0

Just name that function to keep things inline.

$(document).keydown(function myhandler(e) { // <- see? "myhandler"!
    //do stuff blahblah
    $(document).off("keydown", null, myhandler)
});

P.S. Same thing without jquery:

document.addEventListener("keydown", function myhandler(event) {
    //blahblahblah do stuff
    document.removeEventListener("keydown", myhandler);
});

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