Reputation: 83366
I have a jQuery UI datepicker that, when you click on a date, clears my URL hash to #
, and doesn't change the date in the textbox.
I assume there's some other JavaScript utility somewhere that has some sort of delegated event that's also being called, throwing an error, and killing the jquery handler.
How can I step through, and or see all delegated events match this dom element.
Upvotes: 9
Views: 3681
Reputation: 1075427
Chrome's dev tools can help with this:
click
is hooked both for a.vote-up-off
and document
.) So you can kick around those to see what direct and delegated handlers relate to that event for that element.Other than that, you could use the un-minified version of jQuery and walk through the event dispatch when you click the date in the datepicker.
And of course, Gabe's shown how you can get the jQuery-specific handlers via the undocumented jQuery events
data. (That won't show you delegated handlers (unless you walk the ancestor tree), and won't show you non-jQuery handlers that might be attached, but it's still pretty useful stuff.)
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 50523
With jQuery you can see all the elements events by accessing the events
key of the data.
Example:
HTML
<input type="text" id="myelement" />
JS
$(function() {
var myelement = $('#myelement');
myelement.click(function() {
console.log('anonymous event');
});
myelement.click(anotherEvent);
myelement.change(anotherEvent);
var events = myelement.data('events');
console.log('Number of click events:' + events.click.length);
console.log('Number of change events:' + events.change.length);
});
function anotherEvent(){
console.log('another event');
}
Upvotes: 4