Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to dynamically rebind JQuery Objects

I am making a module for the Joomla! page of a client that uses Ajax to render different queries to the database. The result of these queries is that I regenerate the entire HTML code of the different DIVs. Within my jQuery Object I have a function named as cache() that stores all objects that I need to attach them the different events. My problem is that every time I regenerate the HTML code from any of these divs, I have to rebuild all the objects, so I've created a new function recache() to make this work more easy.

I guess this is not the best procedure. Is there any way to keep alive these handlers without having to call this function cache() each time, or is there any way to rebind dynamically this objects?

Thank you!

Here my code:

    var Object = {
        init: function() {
            this.cache();
            this.bindEvents();
            return this;
        },

        cache: function() {
                   OBJECTS....
                       this.nameObject = $('#anchor');
                       etc..
        },

        recache: function() {
            Objects to be recached as needed.
        },

        bindEvents: function() {
            EVENTS attached to the objects. 
                        this.nameObject.on( 'click', 'context', this.nameFunction );

        },

                    nameFunction: function() {
                        #CODE....
                    }

                }; //END Playlist (Object)

window.Object = Object.init();

I usually use on() function instead of delegate(), live() or bind(), butI'm not sure this is exactly my problem.

Thanks in advance!

like image 762
Alberto Avatar asked Dec 07 '22 15:12

Alberto


1 Answers

You hinted at the right plan: use .on(). Remember though that when you're delegating a listener, you need to delegate to a listener that will not be destroyed.

Or in other words:

// will not do anything useful for this scenario:
$('.something').on('click', function() { /* ... */ });

is different from

// use the document as a listener: will work but not efficient
$(document).on('click', '.something', function() { /* ... */ });

which is different from

// use a closer ancestor that is NOT destroyed. Best option if you can
$('#someAncestor').on('click', '.something', function() { /* ... */ });
like image 118
Greg Pettit Avatar answered Dec 09 '22 03:12

Greg Pettit