how can i add more behaviour to existing onclick events e.g.
if the existing object looks like
<a href="http://abc" onclick="sayHello()">link</a>
<script>
function sayHello(){
alert('hello');
}
function sayGoodMorning(){
alert('Good Morning');
}
</script>
how can i add more behavior to the onclick that would do also the following
alert("say hello again");
sayGoodMorning()
Best Regards, Keshav
how can i add more behaviour to existing onclick events e.g.
if the existing object looks like
<a href="http://abc" onclick="sayHello()">link</a>
<script>
function sayHello(){
alert('hello');
}
function sayGoodMorning(){
alert('Good Morning');
}
</script>
how can i add more behavior to the onclick that would do also the following
alert("say hello again");
sayGoodMorning()
Best Regards, Keshav
Share Improve this question edited Jul 17, 2010 at 7:26 Anurag 142k37 gold badges222 silver badges261 bronze badges asked Jul 17, 2010 at 7:13 keshav84keshav84 2,3015 gold badges25 silver badges34 bronze badges5 Answers
Reset to default 10Here's the dirtiest way :)
<a href=".." onclick='sayHello();alert("say hello again");sayGoodMorning()'>.</a>
Here's a somewhat saner version. Wrap everything into a function:
<a href=".." onclick="sayItAll()">..</a>
JavaScript:
function sayItAll() {
sayHello();
alert("say hello again");
sayGoodMorning();
}
And here's the proper way to do it. Use the event registration model instead of relying on the onclick
attribute or property.
<a id="linkId" href="...">some link</a>
JavaScript:
var link = document.getElementById("linkId");
addEvent(link, "click", sayHello);
addEvent(link, "click", function() {
alert("say hello again");
});
addEvent(link, "click", sayGoodMorning);
A cross-browser implementation of the addEvent
function is given below (from scottandrew.com):
function addEvent(obj, evType, fn) {
if (obj.addEventListener) {
obj.addEventListener(evType, fn, false);
return true;
} else if (obj.attachEvent) {
var r = obj.attachEvent("on" + evType, fn);
return r;
} else {
alert("Handler could not be attached");
}
}
Note that if all 3 actions must be run sequentially, then you should still go ahead and wrap them in a single function. But this approach still tops the second approach, although it seems a little verbose.
var link = document.getElementById("linkId");
addEvent(link, "click", function() {
sayHello();
alert("say hello again");
sayGoodMorning();
});
Another way not mentioned is to capture the function currently assigned to the element.onclick
attribute, then assign a new function that wraps the old one. A simple implementation to demonstrate would be something like
function addEvent(element, type, fn) {
var old = element['on' + type] || function() {};
element['on' + type] = function () { old(); fn(); };
}
var a = document.getElementById('a');
function sayHello(){
alert('hello');
}
function sayGoodMorning(){
alert('Good Morning');
}
addEvent(a, 'click', sayHello);
addEvent(a, 'click', sayGoodMorning);
Working Demo here
One way would be to write a third function:
<a href="http://abc" onclick="foo()">link</a>
<script>
function sayHello(){
alert('hello');
}
function sayGoodMorning(){
alert('Good Morning');
}
function foo() {
alert("say hello again");
sayGoodMorning();
}
</script>
<a href="http://abc" onclick="sayHello(),sayX(),sayY(),sayZ()">link</a>
would also work
Assuming a slight change to your code:
<a href="http://abc" id="a1" onclick="sayHello()">link</a>
In plain ol' JavaScript, you'd do something like this.
var a = document.getElementById('a1');
a.onclick = function () { alert('say hello again'); a.onclick(); }
It's worth noting that jQuery makes this a bit easier. See the documentation on the click, bind, and one, for example, and in general the section on event handler attachment.