Reputation: 567
I've seen a lot of posts on this issue but none of the solutions worked. The following..
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$("a.login_linkedinbutton").click(function(){
$("#signup-form").submit();
return false;
});
});
</script>
is what I have in the body tag of a page. Also in the body is the form, the html of which in IE shows up like this..
<form accept-charset="UTF-8" action="/auth/linkedin" class="well form-inline" id="signup-form" method="post">
<a class="login_linkedinbutton" href="#">Login using Linkedin</a>
</form>
in IE8, when the link within the form is clicked, the jquery is not getting triggered. It's working in Chrome and Firefox. I've tried:
1) Using the live event to bind the click action 2) Moved the jquery out of the page and into rails assets
Any ideas what else to try?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 112
Reputation: 5407
Use <input type="submit" value="Login using Linkedin">
Why create problems by using a non-standard element and then trying to recover from it?
If you want it to LOOK like a link, just style the button. But why do it? It's poor user experience to suggest the user to go to another page while they're submitting a form. Most users avoid clicking links when they have a form filled because they're afraid of loosing what they just typed.
If you insist using the link, you could try this:
var onLinkedInLogin = function(e){
e.preventDefault(); // stops the link processing
$("#signup-form").submit();
// add return false; if you want to stop event propagation also
// equivalent to calling both, e.preventDefault() and e.stopPropagation().
};
$(document).on('click', 'a.login_linkedinbutton', onLinkedInLogin);
The reason I'm suggesting using .on()
instead on .click()
is that I guess that on IE, the a.login_linkedinbutton
is not present in the DOM when you call the .click()
.
Upvotes: 5