Trigger $document.ready (so AJAX Code I Can't Modify Is Executed)
function AjaxLoaded() {
$(document).trigger('ready');
}
drop the quotes around document
.
Solution 2:
Since the jQuery readyList is not exposed as of version 1.4 (discussed here) the nice solutions above are broken.
A way around this is by creating your own readyList, through overriding the original jQuery-ready method. This needs to be done before other scripts that use the original ready method are loaded. Otherwise just the same code as John/Kikito:
// Overrides jQuery-ready and makes it triggerable with $.triggerReady
// This script needs to be included before other scripts using the jQuery-ready.
// Tested with jQuery 1.7
(function(){
var readyList = [];
// Store a reference to the original ready method.
var originalReadyMethod = jQuery.fn.ready;
// Override jQuery.fn.ready
jQuery.fn.ready = function(){
if(arguments.length && arguments.length > 0 && typeof arguments[0] === 'function') {
readyList.push(arguments[0]);
}
// Execute the original method.
originalReadyMethod.apply( this, arguments );
};
// Used to trigger all ready events
$.triggerReady = function() {
$(readyList).each(function(){this();});
};
})();
I'm not sure whether it is advisable to override the ready method. Feel free to advise me on that. I have not yet found any side effects myself though.
Solution 3:
Just in case anyone needs it, I refined John's solution a bit so it could be used directly as an included javascript file.
// jquery_trigger_ready.js
// this function is added to jQuery, it allows access to the readylist
// it works for jQuery 1.3.2, it might break on future versions
$.getReadyList = function() {
if(this.readyList != null) { this.myreadylist = [].concat(this.readyList); }
return this.myreadylist;
};
$(document).ready(function() {
readylist = $.getReadyList();
});
$.triggerReady = function() {
$(readylist).each(function(){this();});
}
Including this file after including jquery allows for triggering ready by invoking $.triggerReady()
. Example:
<html>
<head>
<title>trigger ready event</title>
<script src="test2_files/jquery-1.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="jquery_trigger_ready.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
</head>
<body>
<input onclick="$.triggerReady();" value="trigger ready" type="button">
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
alert("blah");
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
By the way, I wanted to make it $(document).triggerReady()
. If anyone is willing to share some advice on that, ill be appreciated.
Solution 4:
We had the same problem and solved it another way.
Instead of
$(document).ready(function () {
$('.specialClass').click(....
We used :
$(document).bind('ready', function(event) {
$('.specialClass', event.target).click(..
jQuery will trigger a "ready" event on the document as usual. When we load the content of a new div via ajax, we can write:
loadedDiv.trigger('ready')
And have all the initialization performed only on the div, obtaining what expected.
Solution 5:
Simone Gianni's Answer I think is the most elegant and clean.
and you can even simplify it to become even more easy to use:
jQuery.fn.loadExtended = function(url,completeCallback){
return this.load(url,function(responseText, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest) {
if (completeCallback !== undefined && completeCallback !== null) {
completeCallback(responseText, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest);
}
$(this).trigger("ready");
});
};
So, now instead of using:
$(".container").load(url,function(responseText, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest) {
$(this).trigger("ready");
});
you can just use:
$(".container").loadExtended("tag_cloud.html");
or:
$(".container").loadExtended("tag_cloud.html",function(){
alert('callback function')
});
This has the advantage of only applying the trigger on the div that's being updated.
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