202

I want to hold an event until I am ready to fire it e.g

$('.button').live('click', function(e){

   e.preventDefault(); 

   // do lots of stuff

   e.run() //this proceeds with the normal event    

}

Is there an equivalent to the run() function described above?

2
  • The default behavior only occurs after your handler returns. It makes little sense to prevent that behavior only to allow it later in your handler. Sep 30, 2011 at 13:16
  • 9
    @FrédéricHamidi Unfortunately, async stuff ($.ajax, callbacks, etc.) will allow default behavior to occur.
    – vzwick
    Sep 30, 2011 at 13:21

17 Answers 17

203

Nope. Once the event has been canceled, it is canceled.

You can re-fire the event later on though, using a flag to determine whether your custom code has already run or not - such as this (please ignore the blatant namespace pollution):

var lots_of_stuff_already_done = false;

$('.button').on('click', function(e) {
    if (lots_of_stuff_already_done) {
        lots_of_stuff_already_done = false; // reset flag
        return; // let the event bubble away
    }

    e.preventDefault();

    // do lots of stuff

    lots_of_stuff_already_done = true; // set flag
    $(this).trigger('click');
});

A more generalized variant (with the added benefit of avoiding the global namespace pollution) could be:

function onWithPrecondition(callback) {
    var isDone = false;

    return function(e) {
        if (isDone === true)
        {
            isDone = false;
            return;
        }

        e.preventDefault();

        callback.apply(this, arguments);

        isDone = true;
        $(this).trigger(e.type);
    }
}

Usage:

var someThingsThatNeedToBeDoneFirst = function() { /* ... */ } // do whatever you need
$('.button').on('click', onWithPrecondition(someThingsThatNeedToBeDoneFirst));

Bonus super-minimalistic jQuery plugin with Promise support:

(function( $ ) {
    $.fn.onButFirst = function(eventName,         /* the name of the event to bind to, e.g. 'click' */
                               workToBeDoneFirst, /* callback that must complete before the event is re-fired */
                               workDoneCallback   /* optional callback to execute before the event is left to bubble away */) {
        var isDone = false;

        this.on(eventName, function(e) {
            if (isDone === true) {
                isDone = false;
                workDoneCallback && workDoneCallback.apply(this, arguments);
                return;
            }

            e.preventDefault();

            // capture target to re-fire event at
            var $target = $(this);

            // set up callback for when workToBeDoneFirst has completed
            var successfullyCompleted = function() {
                isDone = true;
                $target.trigger(e.type);
            };

            // execute workToBeDoneFirst callback
            var workResult = workToBeDoneFirst.apply(this, arguments);

            // check if workToBeDoneFirst returned a promise
            if (workResult && $.isFunction(workResult.then))
            {
                workResult.then(successfullyCompleted);
            }
            else
            {
                successfullyCompleted();
            }
        });

        return this;
    };
}(jQuery));

Usage:

$('.button').onButFirst('click',
    function(){
        console.log('doing lots of work!');
    },
    function(){
        console.log('done lots of work!');
    });
4
  • 4
    .live is depricated. Use .on used in @Cory Danielson example below.
    – nwolybug
    Mar 25, 2015 at 17:19
  • This is again getting inside .click and at last I see "too much recursion" Feb 9, 2016 at 6:40
  • 5
    @HimanshuPathak - you probably forgot to set the lots_of_stuff_already_done = true; flag - otherwise there is no way for the function to keep recursing.
    – vzwick
    Feb 9, 2016 at 16:15
  • 1
    But if selector matches multiple elements, then closure will reuse isDone for each and every one of them.
    – Top-Master
    Apr 17, 2022 at 6:25
78

A more recent version of the accepted answer.

Brief version:

$('#form').on('submit', function(e, options) {
    options = options || {};

    if ( !options.lots_of_stuff_done ) {
        e.preventDefault();
        $.ajax({
            /* do lots of stuff */
        }).then(function() {
            // retrigger the submit event with lots_of_stuff_done set to true
            $(e.currentTarget).trigger('submit', { 'lots_of_stuff_done': true });
        });
    } else {
        /* allow default behavior to happen */
    }

});



A good use case for something like this is where you may have some legacy form code that works, but you've been asked to enhance the form by adding something like email address validation before submitting the form. Instead of digging through the back-end form post code, you could write an API and then update your front-end code to hit that API first before allowing the form to do it's traditional POST.

To do that, you can implement code similar to what I've written here:

$('#signup_form').on('submit', function(e, options) {
    options = options || {};

    if ( !options.email_check_complete ) {

        e.preventDefault(); // Prevent form from submitting.
        $.ajax({
            url: '/api/check_email'
            type: 'get',
            contentType: 'application/json',
            data: { 
                'email_address': $('email').val() 
            }
        })
        .then(function() {
            // e.type === 'submit', if you want this to be more dynamic
            $(e.currentTarget).trigger(e.type, { 'email_check_complete': true });
        })
        .fail(function() {
            alert('Email address is not valid. Please fix and try again.');
        })

    } else {

        /**
             Do traditional <form> post.
             This code will be hit on the second pass through this handler because
             the 'email_check_complete' option was passed in with the event.
         */

        $('#notifications').html('Saving your personal settings...').fadeIn();

    }

});
1
  • 2
    "Instead of digging through the back-end form post code"... In fact you have to do it anyway, you can't rely on client-side validation alone.
    – Diego V
    Sep 5, 2017 at 11:26
21

You can do something like

$(this).unbind('click').click();
3
  • This is a really nice solution - but doesn't seem to work on IE10/11 ;(
    – JonB
    Jan 20, 2014 at 16:04
  • 50
    Why did you censor the word "pain"? Mar 28, 2014 at 23:25
  • You triggered the click but can you click again? Aug 27, 2019 at 7:24
19

Override the property isDefaultPrevented like this:

$('a').click(function(evt){
  evt.preventDefault();

  // in async handler (ajax/timer) do these actions:
  setTimeout(function(){
    // override prevented flag to prevent jquery from discarding event
    evt.isDefaultPrevented = function(){ return false; }
    // retrigger with the exactly same event data
    $(this).trigger(evt);
  }, 1000);
}

IMHO, this is most complete way of retriggering the event with the exactly same data.

6
  • e is undefined. should be evt.preventDefault(). I tried to edit, but my edits have to be > 6 characters and I just added 2 :(
    – kevnk
    Sep 23, 2016 at 14:22
  • 3
    @kevnk, I typically include a brief description of the edit in the form of a line comment. This should increase the submitted character count.
    – recurse
    Aug 22, 2017 at 15:52
  • 1
    don't know why this answer was not upvoted more, this is really useful. Works with propagation stops too with event.isPropagationStopped = function(){ return false; };. I also added a custom property to the event so that I can detect in the handler if the check that prevented the action was done so it's not made again. Great!
    – Kaddath
    Apr 29, 2019 at 10:45
  • I used for Bootstrap 4 Tabs, It worked perfectly fine. Many Thanks. $('#v-pills-tab a').on('click', function (e) { e.preventDefault(); setTimeout(function(){ e.isDefaultPrevented = function(){return false;} $('#v-pills-home-tab').on('shown.bs.tab', function(){ $('.mainDashboard').show(); $('#changePlans').hide();}); }, 1000); $(this).tab('show'); }); Apr 2, 2020 at 8:37
  • 1
    wouldn't this go in loops , the click evt is basically triggered again. Sep 7, 2020 at 13:26
12

A more recent answer skillfully uses jQuery.one()

$('form').one('submit', function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
    // do your things ...

    // and when you done:
    $(this).submit();
});

https://stackoverflow.com/a/41440902/510905

10

It is possible to use currentTarget of the event. Example shows how to proceed with form submit. Likewise you could get function from onclick attribute etc.

$('form').on('submit', function(event) {
  event.preventDefault();

  // code

  event.currentTarget.submit();
});
2
  • submit is not a valid function
    – Devaffair
    Feb 23, 2018 at 20:30
  • 1
    if you call submit() on the same element, will you not return on your ``$('form').on('submit') code and redo it over and over ?
    – Fanie Void
    Jan 24, 2019 at 11:44
8

Just don't perform e.preventDefault();, or perform it conditionally.

You certainly can't alter when the original event action occurs.

If you want to "recreate" the original UI event some time later (say, in the callback for an AJAX request) then you'll just have to fake it some other way (like in vzwick's answer)... though I'd question the usability of such an approach.

4

The approach I use is this:

$('a').on('click', function(event){
    if (yourCondition === true) { //Put here the condition you want
        event.preventDefault(); // Here triggering stops
        // Here you can put code relevant when event stops;
        return;
    }
    // Here your event works as expected and continue triggering
    // Here you can put code you want before triggering
});
3

as long as "lots of stuff" isn't doing something asynchronous this is absolutely unneccessary - the event will call every handler on his way in sequence, so if theres a onklick-event on a parent-element this will fire after the onclik-event of the child has processed completely. javascript doesn't do some kind of "multithreading" here that makes "stopping" the event processing neccessary. conclusion: "pausing" an event just to resume it in the same handler doesn't make any sense.

if "lots of stuff" is something asynchronous this also doesn't make sense as it prevents the asynchonous things to do what they should do (asynchonous stuff) and make them bahave like everything is in sequence (where we come back to my first paragraph)

2
  • The process in the middle is asynchronous, I want to fire the result in the ajax callback...
    – Mazatec
    Sep 30, 2011 at 13:21
  • 1
    if you have to wait for an ajax-request make it synchonous (for jquery, theres the async-fag: api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax)... but making synchonous ajax-request is a bad idea in almost every case, so it would be better to find a different solution.
    – oezi
    Sep 30, 2011 at 13:29
3

Another solution is to use window.setTimeout in the event listener and execute the code after the event's process has finished. Something like...

window.setTimeout(function() {
  // do your thing
}, 0);

I use 0 for the period since I do not care about waiting.

1
  • 1
    I love this solution. No jQuery stuffs.
    – fsevenm
    Nov 7, 2020 at 14:47
3

The accepted solution wont work in case you are working with an anchor tag. In this case you wont be able to click the link again after calling e.preventDefault(). Thats because the click event generated by jQuery is just layer on top of native browser events. So triggering a 'click' event on an anchor tag wont follow the link. Instead you could use a library like jquery-simulate that will allow you to launch native browser events.

More details about this can be found in this link

3

you can use it with Timer or without Timer.

const form = document.querySelector('#form');

form.addEventListener('submit', (x) => {

    x.preventDefault()

    // Ajax or nay Code

    setTimeout(() => {
        x.target.submit();
    }, 1000)

})
2
  • Uncaught TypeError: x.target.submit is not a function and this is not working Oct 13, 2022 at 8:29
  • here x is our form and with 'target' we can access to it and with 'submit()' we can submit our function, so 'x.target.submit();' is right Mar 24, 2023 at 14:54
1

I know this topic is old but I think I can contribute. You can trigger the default behavior of an event on a specific element any time in your handler function if you already know that behavior. For example, when you trigger the click event on the reset button, you actually call the reset function on the closest form as the default behavior. In your handler function, after using the preventDefault function, you can recall the default behavior by calling the reset function on the closest form anywhere in your handler code.

1

if it's simple stuff you can play with mouseenter

$(document).on('mouseenter','.button',function(e) {
    //if class not exist yet -> do ajax
    
    //after complete add class
    $(this).addClass('ajx-event-completed');
});

$(document).on('click','.button',function(e) {
    if($(this).hasClass('ajx-event-completed')){
        //do something else
    }
    else{
        e.preventDefault();
        //we are CLOSED today! See you next week
    }
    //do more
});
0

If this example can help, adds a "custom confirm popin" on some links (I keep the code of "$.ui.Modal.confirm", it's just an exemple for the callback that executes the original action) :

//Register "custom confirm popin" on click on specific links
$(document).on(
    "click", 
    "A.confirm", 
    function(event){
        //prevent default click action
        event.preventDefault();
        //show "custom confirm popin"
        $.ui.Modal.confirm(
            //popin text
            "Do you confirm ?", 
            //action on click 'ok'
            function() {
                //Unregister handler (prevent loop)
                $(document).off("click", "A.confirm");
                //Do default click action
                $(event.target)[0].click();
            }
        );
    }
);
0

If you add an event listener to a form and await its submission then after checking what you need to check you can call the submission of the form with .submit ie

const checkoutForm = document.getElementById('checkout-form');
const cart = {};
if (checkoutForm) {
    checkoutForm.addEventListener('submit', e => {
        e.preventDefault();
        if(JSON.stringify(cart) === '{}'){
            console.log('YOUR CART IS EMPTY')
            alert('YOUR CART IS EMPTY');
            return;
        }
        else{
            checkoutForm.submit();
        }
    })
}
<form id="checkout-form" action="action-page" method="post">
  <input type="text" name="name" />
  <button>Submit</button>
</form>

With this you can solve the form submission issues like checking for the strength of the password and checking whether all fields needed have the correct data

0

Here is my old idea of using preventDefault and trigger "click" inside. I just pass argument "prevent" to the function:

$(document).on('click', '.attachments_all', function(e, prevent = true){

    if(prevent){

        e.preventDefault();

        var button = $(this);
        var id = button.data('id');
    
        $.ajax({
            type: 'POST',
            url: window.location.protocol + '//' + window.location.host + path + '/attachments/attachments-in-order/' + id, 
            dataType: 'json',
            success: function(data){
                if(data.success && data.attachments){ 
                    button.trigger('click', false);
                } else {
                    swal({
                        title: "Brak załączników!",
                        text: "To zamówienie nie posiada żadnych załączników!",
                        type: "error"
                    });
                    return;
                }
            }
        });
    }

});

I hope someone will find it useful

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