70

What is the equivalent to the Element Object in Internet Explorer 9?

if (!Element.prototype.addEventListener) {
    Element.prototype.addEventListener = function() { .. } 
} 

How does it works in Internet Explorer?

If there's a function equal to addEventListener and I don't know, explain please.

Any help would be appreciated. Feel free to suggest a completely different way of solving the problem.

1
  • 1
    Whether a browser implements a prototype inheritance scheme for its DOM objects is not relevant to whether it supports the W3C EventTarget interface. If you wish to test for support, test it directly: if(element.addEventListener) {/*supported*/} else {/*not supported*/} is effective in all browsers and is independent of the implementation.
    – RobG
    Aug 3, 2011 at 14:17

8 Answers 8

149

addEventListener is the proper DOM method to use for attaching event handlers.

Internet Explorer (up to version 8) used an alternate attachEvent method.

Internet Explorer 9 supports the proper addEventListener method.

The following should be an attempt to write a cross-browser addEvent function.

function addEvent(evnt, elem, func) {
   if (elem.addEventListener)  // W3C DOM
      elem.addEventListener(evnt,func,false);
   else if (elem.attachEvent) { // IE DOM
      elem.attachEvent("on"+evnt, func);
   }
   else { // No much to do
      elem["on"+evnt] = func;
   }
}
4
  • 19
    The last condition should also include "on"+. Feb 11, 2013 at 12:24
  • 76
    For IE9 and addEventListener you need an HTML5 <!DOCTYPE html>
    – pcunite
    Aug 16, 2013 at 19:29
  • 1
    @pcunite wish I could up vote that comment more. Very important point
    – Okeydoke
    Oct 9, 2013 at 19:14
  • 5
    Also since IE9 uses IE7 rendering mode in Compatibility view, only the attachEvent works. So it is important to have this check instead of relying on addEventListener.
    – g13n
    Oct 9, 2013 at 21:46
16

John Resig, author of jQuery, submitted his version of cross-browser implementation of addEvent and removeEvent to circumvent compatibility issues with IE's improper or non-existent addEventListener.

function addEvent( obj, type, fn ) {
  if ( obj.attachEvent ) {
    obj['e'+type+fn] = fn;
    obj[type+fn] = function(){obj['e'+type+fn]( window.event );}
    obj.attachEvent( 'on'+type, obj[type+fn] );
  } else
    obj.addEventListener( type, fn, false );
}
function removeEvent( obj, type, fn ) {
  if ( obj.detachEvent ) {
    obj.detachEvent( 'on'+type, obj[type+fn] );
    obj[type+fn] = null;
  } else
    obj.removeEventListener( type, fn, false );
}

Source: http://ejohn.org/projects/flexible-javascript-events/

3
  • This code tries to bind callback fn to obj in addition to adding an event listener, but this is redundant because everyone using JS should already know about this. Feb 9, 2015 at 11:05
  • 3
    You would've gotten more votes if you had introduced John Resig as the author of jQuery. May 29, 2015 at 4:56
  • This implementation isn't complete. It's missing the useCapture parameter.
    – magritte
    May 25, 2017 at 8:41
14

I'm using this solution and works in IE8 or greater.

if (typeof Element.prototype.addEventListener === 'undefined') {
    Element.prototype.addEventListener = function (e, callback) {
      e = 'on' + e;
      return this.attachEvent(e, callback);
    };
  }

And then:

<button class="click-me">Say Hello</button>

<script>
  document.querySelectorAll('.click-me')[0].addEventListener('click', function () {
    console.log('Hello');
  });
</script>

This will work both IE8 and Chrome, Firefox, etc.

2
  • I have problem with Element (type is undefined)
    – zchpit
    May 5, 2017 at 13:18
  • check your document type version, this should be html5 doctype
    – RTeobaldo
    May 5, 2017 at 20:11
2

As Delan said, you want to use a combination of addEventListener for newer versions, and attachEvent for older ones.

You'll find more information about event listeners on MDN. (Note there are some caveats with the value of 'this' in your listener).

You can also use a framework like jQuery to abstract the event handling altogether.

$("#someelementid").bind("click", function (event) {
   // etc... $(this) is whetver caused the event
});
2

Here's something for those who like beautiful code.

function addEventListener(obj,evt,func){
    if ('addEventListener' in window){
        obj.addEventListener(evt,func, false);
    } else if ('attachEvent' in window){//IE
        obj.attachEvent('on'+evt,func);
    }
}

Shamelessly stolen from Iframe-Resizer.

1

addEventListener is supported from version 9 onwards; for older versions use the somewhat similar attachEvent function.

1

EDIT

I wrote a snippet that emulate the EventListener interface and the ie8 one, is callable even on plain objects: https://github.com/antcolag/iEventListener/blob/master/iEventListener.js

OLD ANSWER

this is a way for emulate addEventListener or attachEvent on browsers that don't support one of those
hope will help

(function (w,d) {  // 
    var
        nc  = "", nu    = "", nr    = "", t,
        a   = "addEventListener",
        n   = a in w,
        c   = (nc = "Event")+(n?(nc+= "", "Listener") : (nc+="Listener","") ),
        u   = n?(nu = "attach", "add"):(nu = "add","attach"),
        r   = n?(nr = "detach","remove"):(nr = "remove","detach")
/*
 * the evtf function, when invoked, return "attach" or "detach" "Event" functions if we are on a new browser, otherwise add "add" or "remove" "EventListener"
 */
    function evtf(whoe){return function(evnt,func,capt){return this[whoe]((n?((t = evnt.split("on"))[1] || t[0]) : ("on"+evnt)),func, (!n && capt? (whoe.indexOf("detach") < 0 ? this.setCapture() : this.removeCapture() ) : capt  ))}}
    w[nu + nc] = Element.prototype[nu + nc] = document[nu + nc] = evtf(u+c) // (add | attach)Event[Listener]
    w[nr + nc] = Element.prototype[nr + nc] = document[nr + nc] = evtf(r+c) // (remove | detach)Event[Listener]

})(window, document)
0

I would use these polyfill https://github.com/WebReflection/ie8

<!--[if IE 8]><script
  src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/ie8/0.2.6/ie8.js"
></script><![endif]-->

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