jQuery selectors select matching elements that exist in the DOM when the code is executed, and don't dynamically update. When you call a function, such as .hover()
to add event handler(s), it only adds them to those elements. When you do an AJAX call, and replace a section of your page, you're removing those elements with the event handlers bound to them and replacing them with new elements. Even if those elements would now match that selector they don't get the event handler bound because the code to do that has already executed.
Event handlers
Specifically for event handlers (i.e. .click()
) you can use event delegation to get around this. The basic principle is that you bind an event handler to a static (exists when the page loads, doesn't ever get replaced) element which will contain all of your dynamic (AJAX loaded) content. You can read more about event delegation in the jQuery documentation.
For your click
event handler, the updated code would look like this:
$(document).on('click', "#click", function () {
$('#click').css({
"background-color": "#f00",
"color": "#fff",
"cursor": "inherit"
}).text("Open this window again and this message will still be here.");
return false;
});
That would bind an event handler to the entire document (so will never get removed until the page unloads), which will react to click
events on an element with the id
property of click
. Ideally you'd use something closer to your dynamic elements in the DOM (perhaps a <div>
on your page that is always there and contains all of your page content), since that will improve the efficiency a bit.
The issue comes when you need to handle .hover()
, though. There's no actual hover
event in JavaScript, jQuery just provides that function as a convenient shorthand for binding event handlers to the mouseenter
and mouseleave
events. You can, however, use event delegation:
$(document).on({
mouseenter: function () {
$(this).stop().animate({
width: xwidth * 3,
height: xheight * 3,
margin: -(xwidth / 3)
}, 200); //END FUNCTION
$(this).addClass('image-popout-shadow');
},
mouseleave: function () {
$(this).stop().animate({
width: xwidth,
height: xheight,
margin: 0
}, 200, function () {
$(this).removeClass('image-popout-shadow');
}); //END FUNCTION
}
}, '.image-popout img');
jQuery plugins
That covers the event handler bindings. However, that's not all you're doing. You also initialise a jQuery plugin (colorbox), and there's no way to delegate those to elements. You're going to have to simply call those lines again when you've loaded your AJAX content; the simplest way would be to move those into a separate named function that you can then call in both places (on page load and in your AJAX requests success
callback):
function initialiseColorbox() {
$(".iframe").colorbox({
iframe: true,
width: "1000px",
height: "500px"
});
$(".inline").colorbox({
inline: true,
width: "50%"
});
$(".callbacks").colorbox({
onOpen: function () {
alert('onOpen: colorbox is about to open');
},
onLoad: function () {
alert('onLoad: colorbox has started to load the targeted content');
},
onComplete: function () {
alert('onComplete: colorbox has displayed the loaded content');
},
onCleanup: function () {
alert('onCleanup: colorbox has begun the close process');
},
onClosed: function () {
alert('onClosed: colorbox has completely closed');
}
});
}