views:

5790

answers:

3

Does anybody know of a method to trigger an event in Prototype, as you can with jQuery's trigger function?

I have bound an event listener using the observe method, but I would also like to be able to fire the event programatically.

Thanks in advance

+20  A: 

event.simulate.js fits your needs.

I've used this several times and it works like a charm. It allows you to manually trigger native events, such as click or hover like so:

$('foo').simulate('click');

The great thing about this is that all attached event handlers will still be executed, just as if you would have clicked the element yourself.

For custom events you can use the standard prototype method Event.fire().

Aron Rotteveel
Exactly what I was looking for, thanks very much
Neil Aitken
Freakin' brilliant! That helped me out a lot. Thanks :)
CalebHC
Very nice interface. However, I'd like that `.simulate` method to go into Prototype.js natively :)
Jesper Rønn-Jensen
Take a look on my answer. There is a support in prototype...
piemesons
+4  A: 

I don't think there is one built in to Prototype, but you can use this (not tested but should at least get you in the right direction):

Element.prototype.triggerEvent = function(eventName)
{
    if (document.createEvent)
    {
     var evt = document.createEvent('HTMLEvents');
     evt.initEvent(eventName, true, true);

     return this.dispatchEvent(evt);
    }

    if (this.fireEvent)
     return this.fireEvent('on' + eventName);
}

$('foo').fireEvent('mouseover');
Greg
A: 

I found this post helpful... http://jehiah.cz/archive/firing-javascript-events-properly

It covers a way to fire events in both Firefox and IE.

function fireEvent(element,event){
    if (document.createEventObject){
        // dispatch for IE
        var evt = document.createEventObject();
        return element.fireEvent('on'+event,evt)
    }
    else{
        // dispatch for firefox + others
        var evt = document.createEvent("HTMLEvents");
        evt.initEvent(event, true, true ); // event type,bubbling,cancelable
        return !element.dispatchEvent(evt);
    }
}
John D