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How to trigger a click on a link using jQuery

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How do you trigger a click event for a hyperlink?

Answer: Use the jQuery click() Method You can use the click() method to trigger a click on a link programmatically using jQuery.

How can add trigger click event in jQuery?

$( "#foo" ). trigger( "click" ); As of jQuery 1.3, . trigger() ed events bubble up the DOM tree; an event handler can stop the bubbling by returning false from the handler or calling the .

How do you click something in jQuery?

The click() is an inbuilt method in jQuery that starts the click event or attach a function to run when a click event occurs. Syntax: $(selector). click(function);

How do you trigger a click element?

The HTMLElement. click() method simulates a mouse click on an element. When click() is used with supported elements (such as an <input> ), it fires the element's click event. This event then bubbles up to elements higher in the document tree (or event chain) and fires their click events.


If you are trying to trigger an event on the anchor, then the code you have will work I recreated your example in jsfiddle with an added eventHandler so you can see that it works:

$(document).on("click", "a", function(){
    $(this).text("It works!");
});

$(document).ready(function(){
    $("a").trigger("click");
});

Are you trying to cause the user to navigate to a certain point on the webpage by clicking the anchor, or are you trying to trigger events bound to it? Maybe you haven't actually bound the click event successfully to the event?

Also this:

$('#titleee').find('a').trigger('click');

is the equivalent of this:

$('#titleee a').trigger('click');

No need to call find. :)


Sorry, but the event handler is really not needed. What you do need is another element within the tag to click on.

<a id="test1" href="javascript:alert('test1')">TEST1</a>
<a id="test2" href="javascript:alert('test2')"><span>TEST2</span></a>

Jquery:

$('#test1').trigger('click'); // Nothing
$('#test2').find('span').trigger('click'); // Works
$('#test2 span').trigger('click'); // Also Works

This is all about what you are clicking and it is not the tag but the thing within it. Unfortunately, bare text does not seem to be recognised by JQuery, but it is by vanilla javascript:

document.getElementById('test1').click(); // Works!

Or by accessing the jQuery object as an array

$('#test1')[0].click(); // Works too!!!

Since this question is ranked #1 in Google for "triggering a click on an <a> element" and no answer actually mentions how you do that, this is how you do it:

$('#titleee a')[0].click();

Explanation: you trigger a click on the underlying html-element, not the jQuery-object.

You're welcome googlers :)


With the code you provided, you cannot expect anything to happen. I second @mashappslabs : first add an event handler :

$("selector").click(function() {
    console.log("element was clicked"); // or alert("click");
});

then trigger your event :

$("selector").click(); //or
$("selector").trigger("click");

and you should see the message in your console.


If you are trying to trigger an event on the anchor, then the code you have will work.

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('a#titleee').trigger('click');
});

OR

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('#titleee li a[href="#inline"]').click();
});

OR

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('ul#titleee li a[href="#inline"]').click();
});

This is the demo how to trigger event

<!DOCTYPE html>
    <html>
    <head>
    <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.12.4/jquery.min.js"></script>
    <script>
    $(document).ready(function(){
        $("input").select(function(){
            $("input").after(" Text marked!");
        });
        $("button").click(function(){
            $("input").trigger("select");
        });
    });
    </script>
    </head>
    <body>

    <input type="text" value="Hello World"><br><br>

    <button>Trigger the select event for the input field</button>

    </body>
    </html>