3

I have been looking for a way to permanently change the HTMLFormElement Javascript object's 'onsubmit' behavior. Let's suppose that one of my Javascript would contain the following code:

HTMLFormElement.prototype.onsubmit = function () {
    this.submit();
    // Make sure that you can only submit once.
    this.onsubmit = function () {
        return false;
    };
    return false;
};

The idea would be to simply prevent double submits on all forms of the document. I wasn't able to figure out how to do this since the above example is not working.

Is there a way to achieve this without looping through all existing HTMLElements after the document is loaded? A way which would be compatible with some older browser and also persist the behavior if you create new form elements using other scripts. (Vanilla JS only please)

10
  • 7
    Wouldn't it be easier to just write code that doesn't submit your forms twice, instead of changing native prototypes ?
    – adeneo
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:24
  • 1
    I tried and even multiple .submit() or clicking a submit button multiple times only submitted the form once.
    – Oriol
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:26
  • 2
    document.addEventListener("submit", function(e){ var el=e.target; if(el.spent) return e.preventDefault(); el.spent=true; })
    – dandavis
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:27
  • 2
    @dandavis Don't return false in an event listener, that's only for event handlers. Use e.preventDefault().
    – Oriol
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:28
  • 1
    How older is "compatible with some older browser"? Why do you have [ES6] tag if you want compatibility with older browsers? Are you trying to prevent form submission done by the user (through submit button or implicit submission), or done by you (through .submit())? Are you using target in your form?
    – Oriol
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:44

4 Answers 4

5

Can we overwrite Javascript DOM object prototype properties?

Although the javascript spec cuts host objects a lot of slack in violating normal javascript behavior Object.defineProperty(HTMLFormElement.prototype, "onsubmit", {get: () => {return false;}}) does work. "Work" as in setting a getter on the prototype.

But it's not actually what you want. That's just replacing the getter/setter functionality. There is no guarantee that the browser goes through the javascript inheritance chain to retrieve the handler for the current form.

Either because it bypasses javascript by directly looking at some underlying native properties or because it doesn't have to look at the prototype at all and looks at an instance property of the form itself.

Messing with prototypes is rarely a good idea if you don't know how and when individual properties are actually used by the target class.

Another thing: the getter/setter actually is on HTMLElement.prototype, not HTMLFormElement.prototype. At least that's where it is in Firefox. You should at least inspect the inheritance chain before trying to mess with it ;)

The idea would be to simply prevent double submits on all forms of the document.

Instead of messing with prototypes you can simply install a capturing event listener on the document.

capturing because it happens earlier and is less likely to be intercepted via stopPropagation without canceling the default action, which would be the form submission this case.

document.addEventListener("submit", (e) => {e.preventDefault();}, true);
3
  • The submit event actually propagates to the document? I thought someone in comments claimed it does not, otherwise that would be the ideal solution. Dec 20, 2015 at 13:36
  • By the way I tried the defineProperty trick on both Chrome and Firefox and it didn't seem to behave as expected. I'm not sure there is actually a way to get to what I was hoping without going through all elements. Also the event listener trick does not work in all browsers. Dec 20, 2015 at 21:02
  • I said the prototype thing is not what you want, I just answered that part of the question first.
    – the8472
    Dec 21, 2015 at 7:49
0

How about this?

[].forEach.call(document.getElementsByTagName('form'), function(form) {
  form.onsubmit = function () {
    // Make sure that you can only submit once.
    this.onsubmit = function () {
      return false;
    };
    return true;
  };
});
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  • Actually I'm looking for a way to avoid doing this :) Is there a way to predefine the 'onsubmit' action on all forms without going on them one by one? Dec 19, 2015 at 23:29
  • 1
    Submit events don't bubble though. jQuery has to hack in that functionality. Dec 19, 2015 at 23:31
  • 2
    IE9 yes (i think), IE8, needs attachEvent i think. i dunno, it's been so long since i cared...
    – dandavis
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:34
  • 1
    @adeneo: the form could be targeted
    – dandavis
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:37
  • 1
    @dandavis - I don't think I've ever added a target attribute to a form, like never ?
    – adeneo
    Dec 19, 2015 at 23:40
0

tl;dr: Nope, do as @Louy says, it's correct. DOM was designed to be looped through, no worries.


Yeah, you can overwrite HTMLElement properties and it's same for HTMLElement descendants. But specifically for some properties, like event callbacks, you're not allowed to do that, because they are not normal properties but getters and setters. I get the following error for your code, which is probably what you meant by "doesn't work":

image description

Even if you achieved to do that, I'm not sure if the resulting behavior is defined by standards. I think this would definitely not lead to anything compatible between browsers.

My experience also shows that globally changing some API because you need it for specific functions is not a good idea - soon your request might change and you will be changing whole API in general.

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  • Again the concern was that if you create a new form (e.g.: var newForm= document.createElement('form');) you will have to re-apply the same logic if you want this behavior to be standard accross your site. This behavior was also very unintrusitve which is why I was looking for something simple. But thanks for the details, I understand at least why I cannot overwrite those properties! Dec 19, 2015 at 23:57
  • @NicolasBouvrette Trust me, I thought hard before posting answer that doesn't fullfill your request. I like to say that in programming, nothing is impossible. Unfortunatelly, it's not 100% true. Dec 19, 2015 at 23:59
  • @NicolasBouvrette, you can just as easily create a factory function that creates the form element and attach the listener, now you just call that function instead of document.createElement('form').
    – MinusFour
    Dec 20, 2015 at 0:05
  • @MinusFour Yes I have something like that in mind already - thanks for the suggestion! Dec 20, 2015 at 0:08
  • @MinusFour I also thought of proposing .createElement ovrriding. But there are other ways of creating elements, like parsing HTML (x.innerHTML = "<form ...";). So I concluded it's really hard to make a general reliable solution. Dec 20, 2015 at 0:10
0

Yes, you can overwrite JavaScript DOM object prototype properties. However, you should never ever ever ever... EVER do this! That is, unless you're writing a polyfill that is supposed to add standard behavior so browsers that don't support it. Unless you're in that very specific and fairly rare situation, you're not supposed to ever modify objects you don’t own!

For your specific use case, you can easily achieve the desired effect by using event.preventDefault() on every click of the submit button except for the first click :

var alreadySubmitted = false;

document.getElementById("submitbutton").addEventListener("click", function(event){
    if(!alreadySubmitted) {
        // The first time the button is clicked
        alreadySubmitted = true;
    } else {
        // All subsequent times the button is clicked
        event.preventDefault();
    }
}, false);

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