11

I have the most basic jquery function of them all, but I couldn't find a way in the documentation to trigger the contents of this click function after say 1500 milliseconds:

$('.masonryRecall').click(function(){
  $('#mainContent').masonry();
 });

P.S. just noticed the .delay function jquery 1.4, although, I am using version 1.3. I don't know whether updating this would interfere with any of the other javascript I currently have.

2 Answers 2

17

You can do it with regular javascript using setTimeout().

$('.masonryRecall').click(function(){
        setTimeout("$('#mainContent').masonry()", 1500);
    });
3
  • @Bryon Whitlock Thanks for that. Just to add its .masonry(). But also the timeout doesn't seem to be working. it still fires immediately???
    – kalpaitch
    Mar 30, 2010 at 23:06
  • Again thanks for the direction. just another minor alteration and it works perfectly: setTimeout("$('#mainContent').masonry()", 1500);
    – kalpaitch
    Mar 30, 2010 at 23:12
  • 2
    Don't use quotes around the function. That's equivalent to using eval(). You should instead wrap it in an anonymous function, or use jQuery's proxy function.
    – Alex W
    Feb 3, 2014 at 21:38
16

You should generally stay away from string literals in setTimeout/setInterval. Instead use a closure:

setTimeout(function(){ $('#mainContent').masonry(); }, 1500);`

and even better use it like this (note: the outer closure isn't really necessary):

(function($){
    var timeout=null;
    $('.masonryRecall').click(function(){
        clearTimeout(timeout);
        timeout=setTimeout(function(){$('#mainContent').masonry();}, 1500);
    });
}(jQuery));

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.