I am loading a form via ajax and usind the new .on() to load the jQuery validate plugin is not loaded before I press the submit a second time. I understand why I think. The on() function loads the validate on the form when I press submit. Is there any way to fix this? Before I was using livequery but that does not work with jQuery 1.9.1 or at least is not recommended. Here is my code:
$(document)
.on("submit",function(event){
$("#myform").validate();
event.preventDefault();
})
This code worked before in jQuery 1.4.2
$("#myform")
.livequery(function(){
$(this).validate():
})
So what happens now is the form is not submitted but the errors only show when I press submit a second time.
update: Thanks for new insight Sparky! I am used to livequery in earlier jQuery versions. But I understand that livequery is constantly listening for the element and puts CPU load on the client. Your code on jsfiddle does exactly what I want!
So I should not use .on() on the generated form? Instead run the validate() on the form in the callback. This code works (inside document.ready of course):
$("#ask").click(function(){
//send postdata from inputs, returns form with filled fields (defined with jQuery selectors)
$.post("include_form.lasso",{zip:zip,custno:custno},function(data){
// div"skjema" is filled with form with ID
$("#skjema").html(data);
})
.done(function() { $("#myform").validate();});
})
I have a lot of extras in the validate() that is not shown here. I haven't tested this but I guess it will work. Is it better to use .ajax() instead of my .post() code here? What I do is - when the link is clicked send the two field zip and custno to "include_form.lasso" - fill the result in the "skjema" DIV. This is a form - attach the validate() function to the generated form - I do not need a stopPropogation() on the form to prevent default submit? It should validate first?
Update: After great help from Sparky here is what works: Just wanted to share my code. I needed 2 functions for my dynamic form, validate() and autocomplete(). So I put the validate() code and the autocomplete in 2 functions:
function pumpemod(){
$("#pumpemod").autocomplete({
source: "code/sql2.php?mod=1",
minLength: 3,
delay: 400}); }
function send_validate() { $("#my_dropdown").validate()...}
So in the .on() code I call the functions. When I click a radio button it fetches a form. It looks like this:
$(document)
.on('click','input.montRadio',function(event){
var pnr = $("#postnr").val();
var knr = $(this).attr("rel");
$.post("code/vis_skjema.lasso",{postnr:pnr,kundenr:knr},function(data){
$("#skjema").html("/images/loading.gif");
$("#skjema").html(data);
pumpemod();
send_validate();
});
});
Hopes this can help someone else. At least I got a good understanding now of on(). I wanted to move from livequery to on().
The
on()
function loads the validate on the form when I press submit. ... So what happens now is the form is not submitted but the errors only show when I press submit a second time.
You are correct. The plugin is not initialized on your form until you click submit
the first time. This is because, with on()
, you are simply attaching the plugin's initialization function to a submit
event. No matter how you do this, delegate
, bind
, etc., your problem will be the same... you'll never properly initialize the plugin until after that first click.
So what happens now is the form is not submitted
Your preventDefault()
is blocking the normal submit. You need to get rid of all this and simply call .validate()
immediately after you construct the form's HTML.
Is there any way to fix this?
You must initialize the plugin (one time) immediately after you load the form with your ajax
. Where is the code that does this? Try putting your .validate()
function inside of the complete
callback function of the ajax
that loads your form. This will run .validate()
once upon completion of the ajax
.
Or if you use jQuery .load()
...
$('#content').load('form_loader', function() {
('#myform').validate(); // initialize plugin after form is loaded
});
Without seeing your ajax
code, the crude demo below was quickly constructed to only simulate this concept. Click the "test" button to load a form with ajax
, which then initializes .validate()
upon completion.
You can see the form is loaded into a div
and ready to validate before the very first click.