350

I'm attempting to write a video poker game in Javascript as a way of getting the basics of it down, and I've run into a problem where the jQuery click event handlers are firing multiple times.

They're attached to buttons for placing a bet, and it works fine for placing a bet on the first hand during a game (firing only once); but in betting for the second hand, it fires the click event twice each time a bet or place bet button is pressed (so twice the correct amount is bet for each press). Overall, it follows this pattern for number of times the click event is fired when pressing a bet button once--where the ith term of the sequence is for the betting of the ith hand from the beginning of the game: 1, 2, 4, 7, 11, 16, 22, 29, 37, 46, which appears to be n(n+1)/2 + 1 for whatever that's worth--and I wasn't smart enough to figure that out, I used OEIS. :)

Here's the function with the click event handlers that are acting up; hopefully it's easy to understand (let me know if not, I want to get better at that as well):

/** The following function keeps track of bet buttons that are pressed, until place button is pressed to place bet. **/
function pushingBetButtons() {
    $("#money").text("Money left: $" + player.money); // displays money player has left

    $(".bet").click(function() {
        var amount = 0; // holds the amount of money the player bet on this click
        if($(this).attr("id") == "bet1") { // the player just bet $1
            amount = 1;
        } else if($(this).attr("id") == "bet5") { // etc.
            amount = 5;
        } else if($(this).attr("id") == "bet25") {
            amount = 25;
        } else if($(this).attr("id") == "bet100") {
            amount = 100;
        } else if($(this).attr("id") == "bet500") {
            amount = 500;
        } else if($(this).attr("id") == "bet1000") {
            amount = 1000;
        }
        if(player.money >= amount) { // check whether the player has this much to bet
            player.bet += amount; // add what was just bet by clicking that button to the total bet on this hand
            player.money -= amount; // and, of course, subtract it from player's current pot
            $("#money").text("Money left: $" + player.money); // then redisplay what the player has left
        } else {
            alert("You don't have $" + amount + " to bet.");
        }
    });

    $("#place").click(function() {
        if(player.bet == 0) { // player didn't bet anything on this hand
            alert("Please place a bet first.");
        } else {
            $("#card_para").css("display", "block"); // now show the cards
            $(".card").bind("click", cardClicked); // and set up the event handler for the cards
            $("#bet_buttons_para").css("display", "none"); // hide the bet buttons and place bet button
            $("#redraw").css("display", "block"); // and reshow the button for redrawing the hand
            player.bet = 0; // reset the bet for betting on the next hand
            drawNewHand(); // draw the cards
        }
    });
}

Please let me know if you have any ideas or suggestions, or if the solution to my problem is similar to a solution to another problem on here (I've looked at many similarly titled threads and had no luck in finding a solution that could work for me).

6
  • var amount = parseInt(this.id.replace(/[^\d]/g,''),10); And if you're going to use the same property of an element more than once cache that property, don't keep looking it up. The look-up is expensive. Feb 20, 2013 at 0:05
  • Thank you for the response, and the tip on caching properties. I set player.money and player.bet to local variables money and bet inside that function and manipulated those instead, and will change the rest of my code to do that also.:) If you have time, could you also explain what your suggested initialization of amount is doing; it looks like some regular expression, but I can't make sense of it easily. Feb 20, 2013 at 20:55
  • @GregoryFowler - unrelated to your question, but... a javascript switch statement might be worth looking into.
    – Clayton
    Jun 5, 2014 at 2:37
  • 2
    Man, your function is placing a click handler each time it is invoked. If you invoke it at each round, at round two you have two handlers and so on. Each handler does its job and at round 100 you get 100 alerts. Jun 19, 2015 at 5:38
  • This happens because somewhere in your code, you're rebinding the event handler without first unbinding it. See this question for a similar scenario, and a good explanation.
    – jpaugh
    Oct 23, 2017 at 23:01

29 Answers 29

636

To make sure a click only actions once use this:

$(".bet").unbind().click(function() {
    //Stuff
});
15
  • 40
    OK, where were you yesterday, Rob? ;) That's exactly what I was looking for, don't know why I didn't find it before. But it was still a blessing in disguise because I did learn a lot of other stuff. Feb 21, 2013 at 3:49
  • 2
    ;) sorry. I spun my wheels around for a few days on this one too. I am still searching for a logical reason as to why it even happens in the first place.
    – Rob
    Feb 21, 2013 at 4:11
  • 6
    Man after so many things this did it. Except in my case I used the equivalent of: $(".bet").off().on()
    – MadTurki
    Oct 24, 2013 at 3:30
  • 8
    As jroi_web says below, this method is deprecated. See @trolle's answer for a more recent solution.
    – Pascal
    Sep 11, 2014 at 6:56
  • 2
    A click handler ain't a one-off throwaway thing. Especially when it's the bulky if-if-if shown in the question. You're supposed to attach it and let it do its work as long as the page lives. Jun 19, 2015 at 5:44
458

.unbind() is deprecated and you should use the .off() method instead. Simply call .off() right before you call .on().

This will remove all event handlers:

$(element).off().on('click', function() {
    // function body
});

To only remove registered 'click' event handlers:

$(element).off('click').on('click', function() {
    // function body
});
2
  • 13
    this should be used in the newer version of jQuery since unbind, die or live is already deprecated
    – jroi_web
    Aug 20, 2014 at 6:33
  • This does resolve the issue, but I have many click events and this is the first time I am having an issue. Can you please explain why this happens? Is it recommend to always remove the event handler?
    – Ben
    Dec 7, 2022 at 17:27
176

.one()

A better option would be .one() :

The handler is executed at most once per element per event type.

$(".bet").one('click',function() {
    //Your function
});

In case of multiple classes and each class needs to be clicked once,

$(".bet").on('click',function() {
    //Your function
    $(this).off('click');   //or $(this).unbind()
});
9
  • 11
    best answer, you saved me from a silly hack, this is much better because it if you have multiple onclick events to the same element but in different locations this will not affect the rest, while unbind() and off() will just destroy other onclicks thank you again
    – Fanckush
    Sep 30, 2014 at 0:39
  • 4
    after trying all answers, this one is the only one work for me.
    – neversion
    Mar 26, 2015 at 0:46
  • 16
    One thing to note, if you want the function to only fire once PER CLICK, but continue to fire on subsequent clicks, this one will literally only fire once for the life of the page. So mtl's answer with the off().on() method will need to be used. Feb 23, 2016 at 19:19
  • 2
    @munchschair, there can be multiple reasons for this. Multiple elements with same class inside each other. Or a click handler is registered multiple time in an iteration.
    – Shaunak D
    Aug 29, 2016 at 8:47
  • 4
    Not working for me - still multiple click firings - makes no sense as there's only 1 button element with the ID and only 1 event is trapped (the click event). I thought this was a jQuery bug, but it's probably a Bootstrap modal-dialog bug.
    – MC9000
    Nov 7, 2016 at 10:02
121

If you find that .off() .unbind() or .stopPropagation() still doesn't fix your specific issue, try using .stopImmediatePropagation() Works great in situations when you just want your event to be handled without any bubbling and without effecting any other events already being handled. Something like:

$(".bet").click(function(event) {
  event.stopImmediatePropagation();
  //Do Stuff
});

does the trick!

5
  • This helped me as well as far as stopping event from firing twice, but also messed me up big time. It turns out that if you use event.stopImmediatePropagation() in an event handler attached to a jQuery UI Dialog field, then, for some reason, the dialog can no longer reference the newest instance of global variables and instead uses the version of global variables prior to jQuery UI Dialog rendering. Meaning, that if, for example, your global variable was declared, but not initialized at the time of jQuery UI Dialog rendering, then it will show up as uninitialized jQuery UI Dialog event handler Aug 3, 2015 at 23:23
  • 2
    or if you assigned to some global variable a value of 16 prior to rendering jQuery UI Dialog, which later changed to, say, 55, then 16 will show up for that global variable in jQuery UI Dialog event handler, even if at that time it's no longer 16. So, it looks like a jQuery UI bug that people should be aware of. Aug 3, 2015 at 23:27
  • 1
    For very specific situations that are even difficult to describe. It works exactly as You said: "Works without effecting any other events". Thank You! :)
    – Toms Bugna
    May 18, 2016 at 11:45
  • 2
    I went to more than 15 answers, finally found this e.stopImmediatePropagation!
    – WEshruth
    Oct 8, 2020 at 5:08
  • I was only looking for .stopPropagation() but still this answer gave a quick overview of methods to consider! Sep 4, 2022 at 9:23
21

an Event will fire multiple time when it is registered multiple times (even if to the same handler).

eg $("ctrl").on('click', somefunction) if this piece of code is executed every time the page is partially refreshed, the event is being registered each time too. Hence even if the ctrl is clicked only once it may execute "somefunction" multiple times - how many times it execute will depend on how many times it was registered.

this is true for any event registered in javascript.

solution:

ensure to call "on" only once.

and for some reason if you cannot control the architecture then do this:

$("ctrl").off('click'); $("ctrl").on('click', somefunction);

3
  • What You really want to say? Apr 8, 2015 at 13:35
  • That does not explain what is going on in this case. The button has one unique ID and only 1 event (it's NOT being called multiple times, since it can only be clicked once). This is a bug that only appears in jQuery dialog boxes (and very easy to reproduce).
    – MC9000
    Nov 7, 2016 at 9:58
  • 3
    we do not know whether the function "pushingBetButtons" is called only once or multiple times.. if it is called more than once, than the event is registered multiple times and hence it will also fire multipletimes..even if button is clicked just once. Jan 4, 2017 at 12:04
18

If you're calling that function on each "click", then it's adding another pair of handlers on each call.

Adding handlers with jQuery just isn't like setting the value of the "onclick" attribute. One can add as many handlers as one desires.

1
  • 4
    Your answer set me in the right direction and I learned a lot, but not enough to solve my problem using jQuery unfortunately. :) I tried using on/off, live (and delegate)/die, and one, and then addEventListener/removeEventListener, but the best I could do was slow the exponential growth of handlers. I eventually just solved my problem with onclick for the time being. But I still learned a lot about Javascript's event model, like capturing/bubbling, from your answer, so I appreciate it. Thank you. :) Feb 20, 2013 at 20:49
11
$('.bed').one(function(){ })

Docs:

http://api.jquery.com/one/

6

We must to stopPropagation() In order to avoid Clicks triggers event too many times.

$(this).find('#cameraImageView').on('click', function(evt) {
   evt.stopPropagation();
   console.log("Camera click event.");
});

It Prevents the event from bubbling up the DOM tree, preventing any parent handlers from being notified of the event. This method does not accept any arguments.

We can use event.isPropagationStopped() to determine if this method was ever called (on that event object).

This method works for custom events triggered with trigger(), as well.Note that this will not prevent other handlers on the same element from running.

4

I had a problem because of markup.

HTML:

<div class="myclass">
 <div class="inner">

  <div class="myclass">
   <a href="#">Click Me</a>
  </div>

 </div>
</div>

jQuery

$('.myclass').on('click', 'a', function(event) { ... } );

You notice I have the same class 'myclass' twice in html, so it calls click for each instance of div.

4

When I deal with this issue, I always use:

$(".bet").unbind("click").bind("click", function (e) {
  // code goes here
}

This way I unbind and rebind in the same stroke.

3

The better option would be using off

<script>
function flash() {
  $("div").show().fadeOut("slow");
}
$("#bind").click(function() {
  $( "body" )
    .on("click", "#theone", flash)
    .find("#theone")
      .text("Can Click!");
});
$("#unbind").click(function() {
  $("body")
    .off("click", "#theone", flash)
    .find("#theone")
      .text("Does nothing...");
});
</script>
3

All the stuff about .on() and .one() is great, and jquery is great.

But sometimes, you want it to be a little more obvious that the user isn't allowed to click, and in those cases you could do something like this:

function funName(){
    $("#orderButton").prop("disabled", true);
    //  do a bunch of stuff
    // and now that you're all done
    setTimeout(function(){
        $("#orderButton").prop("disabled",false);
        $("#orderButton").blur();
    }, 3000);
}

and your button would look like:

<button onclick='funName()'>Click here</button>
1
  • 1
    That would solve the case of a user actually clicking multiple times, but... I'm getting multiple click events with the same timestamp. There's no way I could click 3 times in the same millisecond, even if I were extremely quick at it (and somehow unaware of how many times I'm pressing the button).
    – jpaugh
    Oct 23, 2017 at 22:46
2

It happens due to the particular event is bound multiple times to the same element.

The solution which worked for me is:

Kill all the events attached using .die() method.

And then attach your method listener.

Thus,

$('.arrow').click(function() {
// FUNCTION BODY HERE
}

should be:

$('.arrow').die("click")
$('.arrow').click(function() {
// FUNCTION BODY HERE
}
1
  • Deprecated jQuery version 1.7 Also only works if you register using .live()
    – Bonez024
    Oct 12, 2022 at 14:31
2

In my case I was using 'delegate', so none of these solutions worked. I believe it was the button appearing multiple times via ajax calls that was causing the multiple click issue. The solutions was using a timeout so only the last click is recognized:

var t;
$('body').delegate( '.mybutton', 'click', function(){
    // clear the timeout
    clearTimeout(t);
    // Delay the actionable script by 500ms
    t = setTimeout( function(){
        // do something here
    },500)
})
2

I was having this problem with a dynamically generated link:

$(document).on('click', '#mylink', function({...do stuff...});

I found replacing document with 'body' fixed the issue for me:

$('body').on('click', '#mylink', function({...do stuff...});

1
  • Wow, thanks for posting this. Was desperately looking for why $(document).on was firing multiple times! Why does using 'body' work instead? This must be a bug in JQuery.
    – nwood21
    Jul 13, 2022 at 0:26
1
$(element).click(function (e)
{
  if(e.timeStamp !== 0) // This will prevent event triggering more then once
   {
      //do your stuff
   }
}
1

.one only fires once for the lifetime of the page

So in case you want to do validation, this is not the right solution, because when you do not leave the page after validation, you never come back. Better to use

$(".bet").on('click',function() 
{ //validation 
   if (validated) { 
      $(".bet").off('click'); //prevent to fire again when we are not yet off the page
      //go somewhere
    }
});
0

https://jsfiddle.net/0vgchj9n/1/

To make sure the event always only fires once, you can use Jquery .one() . JQuery one ensures that your event handler only called once. Additionally, you can subscribe your event handler with one to allow further clicks when you have finished the processing of the current click operation.

<div id="testDiv">
  <button class="testClass">Test Button</button>
</div>

var subscribeClickEvent = function() {$("#testDiv").one("click", ".testClass", clickHandler);};

function clickHandler() {
  //... perform the tasks  
  alert("you clicked the button");
  //... subscribe the click handler again when the processing of current click operation is complete  
  subscribeClickEvent();
}

subscribeClickEvent();
0

Try that way:

<a href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="this.onclick = false; fireThisFunctionOnlyOnce()"> Fire function </a>
0

In my case, onclick event was firing multiple times coz I had made a generic event handler comparatively as

  `$('div').on("click", 'a[data-toggle="tab"]',function () {
        console.log("dynamic bootstrap tab clicked");
        var href = $(this).attr('href');
        window.location.hash = href;
   });`

changed to

    `$('div#mainData').on("click", 'a[data-toggle="tab"]',function () {
        console.log("dynamic bootstrap tab clicked");
        var href = $(this).attr('href');
        window.location.hash = href;
    });`

and also have to make separate handlers for static and dynamic clicks, for static tab click

    `$('a[data-toggle="tab"]').on("click",function () {
        console.log("static bootstrap tab clicked");
        var href = $(this).attr('href');
        window.location.hash = href;
    });`
0

In my case I had loaded the same *.js file on the page twice in a <script> tag, so both files were attaching event handlers to the element. I removed the duplicate declaration and that fixed the problem.

0

Another solution I found was this, if you have multiple classes and are dealing with radio buttons while clicking on the label.

$('.btn').on('click', function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();

    // Hack - Stop Double click on Radio Buttons
    if (e.target.tagName != 'INPUT') {
        // Not a input, check to see if we have a radio
        $(this).find('input').attr('checked', 'checked').change();
    }
});
0

In case this works fine

$( "#ok" ).bind( "click", function() {
    console.log("click"); 
});
0

Reference @Pointy answer. if this in loop, one can avoid click events firing multiple times by doing something like this:

 $(".bet").each(function(i,item){
       $(this).on({
            click:function(){
                //TRIGGERS ONES
            if(i){
              console.log(i); 
                //DO YOUR THING HERE
            }
            
            }
        });

});
0

use Event.stopPropagation(). It will work.

0

This solution worked for me. When your element added dynamic, you need to do it this way to achieve it. This answer may be for future checking user.

$("body").off("click", ".Element").on("click", ".Element", function(e){
     e.preventDefault();
    //Your code here 
}); 
0

If you just write this:

$(document).off('click').on("click", "#btnID", function(){ })

Then, it will disable click event of all items.

If you just want to off click the specific button, do this

$(document).off('click', "#btnID").on("click", "#btnID", function(){ })

-1

The below code worked for me in my chat application to handle multiple mouse click triggering events more than once. if (!e.originalEvent.detail || e.originalEvent.detail == 1) { // Your code logic }

-1

Unbind () works, but that might cause other issues in the future. The handler triggers multiple times when it is inside another handler, so keep your handler outside and if you want the values of the handler which had nested, assign them to a global variable that it will be accessible to the your handler.

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