How can I trigger a function when I click anywhere on my page except on one div (id=menu_content
) ?
6 Answers
You can apply click
on body
of document and cancel click
processing if the click
event is generated by div with id menu_content
, This will bind event to single element and saving binding of click
with every element except menu_content
$('body').click(function(evt){
if(evt.target.id == "menu_content")
return;
//For descendants of menu_content being clicked, remove this check if you do not want to put constraint on descendants.
if($(evt.target).closest('#menu_content').length)
return;
//Do processing of click event here for every element except with id menu_content
});
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3
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2We can use closest to check of source of event has any ancestor with id menu_content like if($(evt.target).closest('#menu_content').length) retrun; check my updated answer.– AdilJul 1, 2014 at 4:28
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Since
closest
begins with the current element, it handles clicking onmenu_content
, as well as clicking on descendents. I think the secondif
is all you need.– goodeyeNov 16, 2018 at 2:11 -
if ($(evt.target).closest('#menu_content').length) { return; } Somehow bootstrap 3.3 doesn't work for me in a modal window. Cannot find closest(). Always .length == 0 Nov 6, 2022 at 21:43
See the documentation for jQuery Event Target. Using the target property of the event object, you can detect where the click originated within the #menu_content
element and, if so, terminate the click handler early. You will have to use .closest()
to handle cases where the click originated in a descendant of #menu_content
.
$(document).click(function(e){
// Check if click was triggered on or within #menu_content
if( $(e.target).closest("#menu_content").length > 0 ) {
return false;
}
// Otherwise
// trigger your click function
});
try this
$('html').click(function() {
//your stuf
});
$('#menucontainer').click(function(event){
event.stopPropagation();
});
you can also use the outside events
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6This work, but using event.stopPropagation() can have knock on effects on other JS contained within the parent. Jul 6, 2015 at 12:16
I know that this question has been answered, And all the answers are nice. But I wanted to add my two cents to this question for people who have similar (but not exactly the same) problem.
In a more general way, we can do something like this:
$('body').click(function(evt){
if(!$(evt.target).is('#menu_content')) {
//event handling code
}
});
This way we can handle not only events fired by anything except element with id menu_content
but also events that are fired by anything except any element that we can select using CSS selectors.
For instance in the following code snippet I am getting events fired by any element except all <li>
elements which are descendants of div element with id myNavbar
.
$('body').click(function(evt){
if(!$(evt.target).is('div#myNavbar li')) {
//event handling code
}
});
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1I just wanted to say that this method worked for me just fine, I used .is() and also .closest() with a css selector that had no ID but just some classes thank you– relipseOct 10, 2016 at 22:11
here is what i did. wanted to make sure i could click any of the children in my datepicker without closing it.
$('html').click(function(e){
if (e.target.id == 'menu_content' || $(e.target).parents('#menu_content').length > 0) {
// clicked menu content or children
} else {
// didnt click menu content
}
});
my actual code:
$('html').click(function(e){
if (e.target.id != 'datepicker'
&& $(e.target).parents('#datepicker').length == 0
&& !$(e.target).hasClass('datepicker')
) {
$('#datepicker').remove();
}
});
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Nice version including clicks ont children and class, should be the picked answer!– rAthusMay 5, 2017 at 14:39
You could try this:
$(":not(#menu_content)").on("click", function(e) {
e.stopPropagation();
// Run your function when clicked anywhere except #menu_content
// Use with caution, 'cause it will prevent clicking on other elements
});
$("#menu_content").on("click", function(e) {
e.stopPropagation();
// Run when clicked on #menu_content
});