2

if you have

<div id="data" onclick="handleData(1)">Datum 1</div>

and you want to late bind instead:

<div id="data">Datum 1</div>
<script>
    $("#data").click(function() {
        handleData(1);
    })
</script>

How do you pass that parameter 1? do you have to do something like this:

<div id="data" data="1">Datum 1</div>
<script>
    $("#data").click(function() {
        handleData($(this).attr("data"););
    })
</script>
2
  • Can't you just put the figure 1 directly into the parentheses in the function? Are you anticipating that div#data might want to call the function with a different argument in another scenario?
    – David
    Feb 2, 2011 at 16:51
  • I could but inline javascript isn't really unobtrusive. if I had several Datums in a table, I'd want to bind the clicks in a bottom script after document complete.
    – Joe Hanink
    Feb 2, 2011 at 17:04

3 Answers 3

8

I assume you're using jQuery.

If so, I'd take advantage of jQuery's support for the HTML5 data- attribute using the data()(docs) method . It will in all browsers.

<div id="data" data-number="1">Datum 1</div>
<script>
    $("#data").click(function() {
        handleData($(this).data("number"));
    })
</script>

Notice that I changed the attribute to data-number, and accessed it with .data("number"). This requires jQuery 1.4.3 or later.

From the docs:

As of jQuery 1.4.3 HTML 5 data- attributes will be automatically pulled in to jQuery's data object.

1
  • It's worth mentioning that all data attributes must be lower case in the markup (tested in Chrome). Apr 5, 2014 at 14:14
2

Your last approach is almost correct. You should use the data attribute as a prefix in the form of data-someproperty. Then you might access it through $(this).data("someproperty") or $(this).attr("data-someproperty").

Edit: Read about: jQuery.data().

0
0

Assuming that there's more than one data element, yes, you'll have to pass that parameter some other way. It doesn't have to be in the HTML though:

<div class="data">one</div>
<div class="data">two</div>
<div class="data">three</div>

<script>
    $('.data').each(function(ix){$(this).click(function(){handleData(ix)})});
</script>

This is a bit of an abuse of document-ordering, but it's pretty unobtrusive.

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