I\'m kinda new to jQuery, so this may be a silly question... My problem is that i have a click event that triggers when I click any button with the class ajax-submit. What I\'m
The click
event is not attached to the new .ajax-submit
elements.
You will need to use delegate event like with on
or delegate
to do so.
$("#process-container").on('click','.ajax-submit',function() {
var form_data = $('#unlockForm').serialize();
$('.ajaxgif').show();
// I think you didn't really meant: $('.ajaxgif').removeClass('hide');
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "formprocess.php",
data: form_data,
success: function(respuesta) {
$('.ajaxgif').hide();
$('#process-container').html(respuesta);
},
error: function() {
$('.ajaxgif').hide();
alert("Error! Please try again");
}
});
return false;
});
Table of delegate event functions:
$(selector).live(events, data, handler); // jQuery 1.3+
$(document).delegate(selector, events, data, handler); // jQuery 1.4.3+
$(document).on(events, selector, data, handler); // jQuery 1.7+
on
Useful docs:
If selector is omitted or is null, the event handler is referred to as direct or directly-bound. The handler is called every time an event occurs on the selected elements, whether it occurs directly on the element or bubbles from a descendant (inner) element.
When a selector is provided, the event handler is referred to as delegated. The handler is not called when the event occurs directly on the bound element, but only for descendants (inner elements) that match the selector. jQuery bubbles the event from the event target up to the element where the handler is attached (i.e., innermost to outermost element) and runs the handler for any elements along that path matching the selector.
Event handlers are bound only to the currently selected elements; they must exist on the page at the time your code makes the call to .on(). To ensure the elements are present and can be selected, perform event binding inside a document ready handler for elements that are in the HTML markup on the page. If new HTML is being injected into the page, select the elements and attach event handlers after the new HTML is placed into the page. Or, use delegated events to attach an event handler, as described next.
Delegated events have the advantage that they can process events from descendant elements that are added to the document at a later time. By picking an element that is guaranteed to be present at the time the delegated event handler is attached, you can use delegated events to avoid the need to frequently attach and remove event handlers. This element could be the container element of a view in a Model-View-Controller design, for example, or document if the event handler wants to monitor all bubbling events in the document. The document element is available in the head of the document before loading any other HTML, so it is safe to attach events there without waiting for the document to be ready.