Voiding Click Events Implicitly With jQuery Plugin: voidClick()

Posted June 19, 2009 at 2:55 PM

Tags: Javascript / DHTML

When binding an event handler to a click event using jQuery, I'd have to say that 99.99% of the time, I want to cancel the default click event and route all handling through my event binding. Because of this, I've gotten very tired of the repetitive nature of always returning false in my event handlers:

 Launch code in new window » Download code as text file »

  • $( selector ).click(
  • function( objEvent ){
  • // Cancel default event and propagation.
  • return( false );
  • }
  • );

As such, I finally took a few minutes to think about how this type of code could be refactored to remove the repetition. What I came up with was a jQuery plugin, voidClick(), that decorates the click() event binding, executes the given event handler, and then returns false (cancelling the event implicitly):

 Launch code in new window » Download code as text file »

  • <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
  • <html>
  • <head>
  • <title>jQuery Plugin For Code Short Cuts</title>
  • <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.3.2.js"></script>
  • <script type="text/javascript">
  •  
  •  
  • // This method acts just like binding a click-event; the
  • // difference is that it cancels the default event
  • // implicitly such that you don't have to in your method.
  • jQuery.fn.voidClick = function( method ){
  • // Bind a click event to each item in the collection.
  • this.click(
  • function(){
  • // Execute given method callback in current
  • // context as defined by jQuery.
  • method.apply( this, arguments );
  •  
  • // Cancel default event.
  • return( false );
  • }
  • );
  •  
  • // Return existing jquery collection for chaining.
  • return( this );
  • }
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • // When the DOM is ready, initialize.
  • $(function(){
  •  
  • // Bind click event to link.
  • $( "a" ).voidClick(
  • function(){
  • // Alert link HREF to test "this" context.
  • alert( $( this ).attr( "href" ) );
  • }
  • );
  •  
  • });
  •  
  • </script>
  • </head>
  • <body>
  •  
  • <h1>
  • jQuery Plugin For Code Short Cuts
  • </h1>
  •  
  • <p>
  • <a href="http://www.google.com">Navigate Away</a>!
  • </p>
  •  
  • </body>
  • </html>

As you can see, the voidClick() method, takes the given event handler, executes it in the context of the jQuery collection, and then returns false. The return of false cancels the default event and the event propagation such that the user-defined event handler does not have to worry about it. Of course, this does not work for all situations, but you can easily revert back to the traditional click() event binding if need-be.

I know this might seem like such a silly plugin, but it's been saving me a lot mental frustration! In fact, I've even extended this to submit() binding on forms and its been great.

Download Code Snippet ZIP File

Post Comment  |  Ask Ben  |  Permalink  |  Other Searches  |  Print Page



Learning ColdFusion 9 - ColdFusion 9 tutorials, samples, examples, demos

Reader Comments

David Droddy
Jun 19, 2009 at 5:26 PM // reply »
7 Comments

For forms, you should check out the jquery.form plugin. It's pretty slick!


Jun 20, 2009 at 12:12 AM // reply »
53 Comments

Ben,

Maybe I am missing something, because this seems to easy, but isn't this what the preventDefault() method is for in jQuery?

$( selector ).click(
function( objEvent ){
// Cancel default event and propagation.
objEvent.preventDefault();

// Handle Event here
}
);

Ref: http://docs.jquery.com/Events/jQuery.Event#event.preventDefault.28.29


Jun 22, 2009 at 12:37 PM // reply »
55 Comments

Not silly at all, Ben. Very nice: it's on little things like these that large productivity increases are built.


Jun 23, 2009 at 6:03 PM // reply »
6,346 Comments

@Jason,

Returning "false" is the functional equivalent of calling preventDefault() and stopPropagation(). Most of the time, this is exactly what I want to do.

@Hal,

Agreed! The little things make the big difference over the long haul. As Clark would say - it's not the climb up the mountain that kills you, it's the pebble in your shoe.


Post Comment  |  Ask Ben

Recent Blog Comments
Nov 3, 2009 at 2:19 PM
A Moment That Touched Me - The Fountainhead
"I believe that part of her (Rand's) philosophy was that one could not pursue things that asked others to sacrifice themselves." Agreed. That's one of the important points people tend to overlook wh ... read »
Nov 3, 2009 at 2:07 PM
A Moment That Touched Me - The Fountainhead
@Justin, Certainly, we don't have to go overboard - I agree. After all, I just wanted to post a passage that I found moving. And, as with anything that is moving, it is that way to some and not to ... read »
Justin
Nov 3, 2009 at 2:00 PM
A Moment That Touched Me - The Fountainhead
I really don't want to string this out as I will be out maneuvered by the more astute posters. However, blogs are for opinions, even plebes, right? If your pursuit for self-fulfillment interferes wi ... read »
Nov 3, 2009 at 1:35 PM
A Moment That Touched Me - The Fountainhead
@Justin, If you were an architect, you might invite him to a party :) I don't know - I never throw parties (I don't care for them that much). I have to believe, however, that I would enjoy hearing ... read »
Justin
Nov 3, 2009 at 1:29 PM
A Moment That Touched Me - The Fountainhead
Sorry to vent all over your post. If I knew a guy like Roarke, I'd never invite him to a party (he wouldn't come anyhow), and I'd push my grocery cart three aisles down to avoid eye contact. I just w ... read »
Nov 3, 2009 at 1:12 PM
Ask Ben: Checking Domain Name Availability Using ColdFusion
@Mark, I just tried it and it seems to work? Make sure you are getting the whole URL in there. ... read »
Nov 3, 2009 at 1:09 PM
My First ColdFusion Web Service
@Ryan, As far as what a "Web service" actually is, I don't think there is a particular format that is required to make it a web service. SOAP, REST, whatever - they are all just ways to allow two m ... read »
Nov 3, 2009 at 1:08 PM
Ask Ben: Checking Domain Name Availability Using ColdFusion
I tried that link that Andrew left and got an error. ... read »