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Why does returning false in the keydown callback does not stop the button click event?

I have a button and the following javascript routine.

$("button").keydown( function(key) {
  switch(key.keyCode) {
  case 32: //space
    return false;
  }
} );

as I understood it, the return false; would stop the keypress from being processed. So $("button").click(); would not be called. For other keyCodes, this works as expected. For example, if I intercept40, which is the down button, the page is not scrolling.

I noticed this behavior in Firefox.

Why does the return false; does not stop the button click event on space? What does the javascript spec say about this?

like image 642
johannes Avatar asked Oct 28 '09 18:10

johannes


Video Answer


1 Answers

Hope this answers your question:

<input type="button" value="Press" onkeydown="doOtherStuff(); return false;">

return false; successfully cancels an event across browsers if called at the end of an event handler attribute in the HTML. This behaviour is not formally specified anywhere as far as I know.

If you instead set an event via an event handler property on the DOM element (e.g. button.onkeydown = function(evt) {...}) or using addEventListener/attachEvent (e.g. button.addEventListener("keydown", function(evt) {...}, false)) then just returning false from that function does not work in every browser and you need to do the returnValue and preventDefault() stuff from my other answer. preventDefault is specified in the DOM 2 spec and is implemented by most mainstream modern browsers. returnValue is IE-specific.

like image 197
Tim Down Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 21:09

Tim Down