316

I am trying to call a function with parameters using jQuery's .click, but I can't get it to work.

This is how I want it to work:

$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event('shot'));

which calls

function add_event(event) {
    blah blah blah }

It works if I don't use parameters, like this:

$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event);
function add_event() {
    blah blah blah }

But I need to be able to pass a parameter through to my add_event function.

How can I do this specific thing?

I know I can use .click(function() { blah }, but I call the add_event function from multiple places and want to do it this way.

1
  • this is adopted from patricks answer, which I think is a great solution: jsfiddle.net/naRRk/1
    – jAndy
    Jul 17, 2010 at 21:56

8 Answers 8

561

For thoroughness, I came across another solution which was part of the functionality introduced in version 1.4.3 of the jQuery click event handler.

It allows you to pass a data map to the event object that automatically gets fed back to the event handler function by jQuery as the first parameter. The data map would be handed to the .click() function as the first parameter, followed by the event handler function.

Here's some code to illustrate what I mean:

// say your selector and click handler looks something like this...
$("some selector").click({param1: "Hello", param2: "World"}, cool_function);

// in your function, just grab the event object and go crazy...
function cool_function(event){
    alert(event.data.param1);
    alert(event.data.param2);
}
13
  • For me, I had to remove the data part, e.g. alert(event.param1); I'm using jquery 1.10.2, maybe they've changed something?
    – Family
    May 15, 2013 at 15:34
  • 1
    I am dynamically creating the object on the server side and binding the click event with: r.OnClientClick = "imageClicked({param1: '" + obj.Command + "' });return false"; Then on the client side I have: function imageClicked(event) { if (event.param1 == "GOTO PREVIOUS") {... If I use event.data.param1 it says that it's undefined. Now I've typed it out here, I can see the difference, d'oh!
    – Family
    May 16, 2013 at 1:43
  • 1
    @Family - Haaha no problem, it's nice to help, even through comments ;) May 16, 2013 at 9:50
  • 5
    @totymedli - I guess you could always call it somewhere else, passing an object of the same structure: var param_obj = {data : {param1: "Hello", param2: "World"}}; cool_function(param_obj); ? Aug 22, 2013 at 7:45
  • 1
    This is so much better than using HTML5 data- attributes, thank you! (And solves JSHint complaining about using 'this' in the callback too!) Oct 28, 2014 at 23:22
89

You need to use an anonymous function like this:

$('.leadtoscore').click(function() {
  add_event('shot')
});

You can call it like you have in the example, just a function name without parameters, like this:

$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event);

But the add_event method won't get 'shot' as it's parameter, but rather whatever click passes to it's callback, which is the event object itself...so it's not applicable in this case, but works for many others. If you need to pass parameters, use an anonymous function...or, there's one other option, use .bind() and pass data, like this:

$('.leadtoscore').bind('click', { param: 'shot' }, add_event);

And access it in add_event, like this:

function add_event(event) {
  //event.data.param == "shot", use as needed
}
4
  • When you say just, does that mean only? Secondly, does that mean I would be able to use $(this) inside my add_event function like I normally would inside the anonymous function? Jul 17, 2010 at 21:36
  • 2
    @phoffer - Yes, "just" means no params, only the function name, it's a reference to the function, not the result of running the function you want to assign to the click handler. In the anonymous method and .bind() examples above you can use this, it'll refer to the .loadtoscore you clicked on (like you'd expect). In the last example, inside add_event(event) the same is true, use this or $(this) and it'll be what you want. Jul 17, 2010 at 21:41
  • 1
    @phoffer: You would have to pass the element explicitly in order to use it, e.g.: function(){ add_event('shot', $(this));} and function add_event(event, element){...}. element would be a jQuery element here (it works with bind() though as Nick mentioned). Jul 17, 2010 at 21:41
  • @Felix - He can also use $(this) inside the function, for example: jsfiddle.net/tSu5t Jul 17, 2010 at 21:44
37

If you call it the way you had it...

$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event('shot'));

...you would need to have add_event() return a function, like...

function add_event(param) {
    return function() {
                // your code that does something with param
                alert( param );
           };
}

The function is returned and used as the argument for .click().

1
  • @jAndy - Thanks for posting the example including the event parameter. I should have included it. :o)
    – user113716
    Jul 17, 2010 at 21:54
37

I had success using .on() like so:

$('.leadtoscore').on('click', {event_type: 'shot'}, add_event);

Then inside the add_event function you get access to 'shot' like this:

event.data.event_type

See the .on() documentation for more info, where they provide the following example:

function myHandler( event ) {
  alert( event.data.foo );
}
$( "p" ).on( "click", { foo: "bar" }, myHandler );
11

Yes, this is an old post. Regardless, someone may find it useful. Here is another way to send parameters to event handlers.

//click handler
function add_event(event, paramA, paramB)
{
    //do something with your parameters
    alert(paramA ? 'paramA:' + paramA : '' + paramB ? '  paramB:' + paramB : '');
}

//bind handler to click event
$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event);
...
//once you've processed some data and know your parameters, trigger a click event.
//In this case, we will send 'myfirst' and 'mysecond' as parameters
$('.leadtoscore').trigger('click', {'myfirst', 'mysecond'});

//or use variables
var a = 'first',
    b = 'second';

$('.leadtoscore').trigger('click', {a, b});
$('.leadtoscore').trigger('click', {a});
6
      $imgReload.data('self', $self);
            $imgReload.click(function (e) {
                var $p = $(this).data('self');
                $p._reloadTable();
            });

Set javaScript object to onclick element:

 $imgReload.data('self', $self);

get Object from "this" element:

 var $p = $(this).data('self');
1
  • Awesome! Sadly, this is the only thing that works when I try to use jquery variables! no idea why. :|
    – cregox
    Feb 15, 2015 at 1:51
6

I get the simple solution:

 <button id="btn1" onclick="sendData(20)">ClickMe</button>

<script>
   var id; // global variable
   function sendData(valueId){
     id = valueId;
   }
   $("#btn1").click(function(){
        alert(id);
     });
</script>

My mean is that pass the value onclick event to the javascript function sendData(), initialize to the variable and take it by the jquery event handler method.

This is possible since at first sendData(valueid) gets called and initialize the value. Then after jquery event get's executed and use that value.

This is the straight forward solution and For Detail solution go Here.

2
  • 1
    I don't see a way to pass dynamic parameters here, only hard-coded values. Jan 24, 2019 at 8:40
  • this way you pass only the valueId and lose the element and the event objects. May 8, 2019 at 12:57
2

Since nobody pointed it out (surprisingly). Your problem is, that $('.leadtoscore').click(add_event); is not the same as $('.leadtoscore').click(add_event('shot'));. The first one passes a function, the second a function invocation so the result of that function is passed to .click() instead. That's not what you want. Here's what you want in vanilla JavaScript terms:

$('.leadtoscore').click(add_event.bind(this, 'shot'));

Function.prototype.bind() passes the function to .click() just like in the first example but with bound this and arguments that will be accessible on invocation.

1
  • 1
    This should be the selected answer by far
    – GGAle
    Jul 28, 2022 at 17:29

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