Preventing multiple clicks on button - javascript

I have following jQuery code to prevent double clicking a button. It works fine. I am using Page_ClientValidate() to ensure that the double click is prevented only if the page is valid. [If there are validation errors the flag should not be set as there is no postback to server started]
Is there a better method to prevent the second click on the button before the page loads back?
Can we set the flag isOperationInProgress = yesIndicator only if the page is causing a postback to server? Is there a suitable event for it that will be called before the user can click on the button for the second time?
Note: I am looking for a solution that won't require any new API
Note: This question is not a duplicate. Here I am trying to avoid the use of Page_ClientValidate(). Also I am looking for an event where I can move the code so that I need not use Page_ClientValidate()
Note: No ajax involved in my scenario. The ASP.Net form will be submitted to server synchronously. The button click event in javascript is only for preventing double click. The form submission is synchronous using ASP.Net.
Present Code
$(document).ready(function () {
var noIndicator = 'No';
var yesIndicator = 'Yes';
var isOperationInProgress = 'No';
$('.applicationButton').click(function (e) {
// Prevent button from double click
var isPageValid = Page_ClientValidate();
if (isPageValid) {
if (isOperationInProgress == noIndicator) {
isOperationInProgress = yesIndicator;
} else {
e.preventDefault();
}
}
});
});
References:
Validator causes improper behavior for double click check
Whether to use Page_IsValid or Page_ClientValidate() (for Client Side Events)
Note by #Peter Ivan in the above references:
calling Page_ClientValidate() repeatedly may cause the page to be too obtrusive (multiple alerts etc.).

I found this solution that is simple and worked for me:
<form ...>
<input ...>
<button ... onclick="this.disabled=true;this.value='Submitting...'; this.form.submit();">
</form>
This solution was found in:
Original solution

JS provides an easy solution by using the event properties:
$('selector').click(function(event) {
if(!event.detail || event.detail == 1){//activate on first click only to avoid hiding again on multiple clicks
// code here. // It will execute only once on multiple clicks
}
});

disable the button on click, enable it after the operation completes
$(document).ready(function () {
$("#btn").on("click", function() {
$(this).attr("disabled", "disabled");
doWork(); //this method contains your logic
});
});
function doWork() {
alert("doing work");
//actually this function will do something and when processing is done the button is enabled by removing the 'disabled' attribute
//I use setTimeout so you can see the button can only be clicked once, and can't be clicked again while work is being done
setTimeout('$("#btn").removeAttr("disabled")', 1500);
}
working example

I modified the solution by #Kalyani and so far it's been working beautifully!
$('selector').click(function(event) {
if(!event.detail || event.detail == 1){ return true; }
else { return false; }
});

Disable pointer events in the first line of your callback, and then resume them on the last line.
element.on('click', function() {
element.css('pointer-events', 'none');
//do all of your stuff
element.css('pointer-events', 'auto');
};

After hours of searching i fixed it in this way:
old_timestamp = null;
$('#productivity_table').on('click', function(event) {
// code executed at first load
// not working if you press too many clicks, it waits 1 second
if(old_timestamp == null || old_timestamp + 1000 < event.timeStamp)
{
// write the code / slide / fade / whatever
old_timestamp = event.timeStamp;
}
});

you can use jQuery's [one][1] :
.one( events [, data ], handler ) Returns: jQuery
Description: Attach a handler to an event for the elements. The handler is executed at most once per element per event type.
see examples:
using jQuery: https://codepen.io/loicjaouen/pen/RwweLVx
// add an even listener that will run only once
$("#click_here_button").one("click", once_callback);

using count,
clickcount++;
if (clickcount == 1) {}
After coming back again clickcount set to zero.

May be this will help and give the desired functionality :
$('#disable').on('click', function(){
$('#disable').attr("disabled", true);
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<button id="disable">Disable Me!</button>
<p>Hello</p>

We can use on and off click for preventing Multiple clicks. i tried it to my application and it's working as expected.
$(document).ready(function () {
$("#disable").on('click', function () {
$(this).off('click');
// enter code here
});
})

This should work for you:
$(document).ready(function () {
$('.applicationButton').click(function (e) {
var btn = $(this),
isPageValid = Page_ClientValidate(); // cache state of page validation
if (!isPageValid) {
// page isn't valid, block form submission
e.preventDefault();
}
// disable the button only if the page is valid.
// when the postback returns, the button will be re-enabled by default
btn.prop('disabled', isPageValid);
return isPageValid;
});
});
Please note that you should also take steps server-side to prevent double-posts as not every visitor to your site will be polite enough to visit it with a browser (let alone a JavaScript-enabled browser).

The absolute best way I've found is to immediately disable the button when clicked:
$('#myButton').click(function() {
$('#myButton').prop('disabled', true);
});
And re-enable it when needed, for example:
validation failed
error while processing the form data by the server, then after an error response using jQuery
Another way to avoid a quick double-click is to use the native JavaScript function ondblclick, but in this case it doesn't work if the submit form works through jQuery.

One way you do this is set a counter and if number exceeds the certain number return false.
easy as this.
var mybutton_counter=0;
$("#mybutton").on('click', function(e){
if (mybutton_counter>0){return false;} //you can set the number to any
//your call
mybutton_counter++; //incremental
});
make sure, if statement is on top of your call.

If you are doing a full round-trip post-back, you can just make the button disappear. If there are validation errors, the button will be visible again upon reload of the page.
First set add a style to your button:
<h:commandButton id="SaveBtn" value="Save"
styleClass="hideOnClick"
actionListener="#{someBean.saveAction()}"/>
Then make it hide when clicked.
$(document).ready(function() {
$(".hideOnClick").click(function(e) {
$(e.toElement).hide();
});
});

Just copy paste this code in your script and edit #button1 with your button id and it will resolve your issue.
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#button1").submit(function() {
$(this).submit(function() {
return false;
});
return true;
});
});
</script

Plain JavaScript:
Set an attribute to the element being interacted
Remove the attribute after a timeout
If the element has the attribute, do nothing
const throttleInput = document.querySelector('button');
throttleInput.onclick = function() {
if (!throttleInput.hasAttribute('data-prevent-double-click')) {
throttleInput.setAttribute('data-prevent-double-click', true);
throttleInput.setAttribute('disabled', true);
document.body.append("Foo!");
}
setTimeout(function() {
throttleInput.removeAttribute('disabled');
throttleInput.removeAttribute('data-prevent-double-click');
}, 3000);
}
<button>Click to add "Foo"!</button>

We also set the button to .disabled=true. I added the HTML Command input with type hidden to identify if the transaction has been added by the Computer Server to the Database.
Example HTML and PHP Commands:
<button onclick="myAddFunction(<?php echo $value['patient_id'];?>)" id="addButtonId">ADD</button>
<input type="hidden" id="hasPatientInListParam" value="<?php echo $hasPatientInListParamValue;?>">
Example Javascript Command:
function myAddFunction(patientId) {
document.getElementById("addButtonId").disabled=true;
var hasPatientInList = document.getElementById("hasPatientInListParam").value;
if (hasPatientInList) {
alert("Only one (1) patient in each List.");
return;
}
window.location.href = "webAddress/addTransaction/"+patientId; //reloads page
}
After reloading the page, the computer auto-sets the button to .disabled=false. At present, these actions prevent the multiple clicks problem in our case.
I hope these help you too.
Thank you.

One way I found that works is using bootstrap css to display a modal window with a spinner on it. This way nothing in the background can be clicked. Just need to make sure that you hide the modal window again after your long process completes.

so I found a simple solution, hope this helps.
all I had to do was create a counter = 0, and make the function that runs when clicked only runnable if the counter is = 0, when someone clicks the function the first line in the function sets counter = 1 and this will prevent the user from running the function multiple times when the function is done the last line of the code inside the function sets counter to 0 again

you could use a structure like this, it will execute just once:
document.getElementById('buttonID').addEventListener('click', () => {
...Do things...
},{once:true});

Related

Avoid multiple form submit in html

I'm facing a sort of dummy problem.
On my site there is an order form (simple html form) and I noticed that I get double commands from time to time.
I realized that if I clicked repeatedly few times the submit button (before the action page is loaded) I got as many commands as I have clicked.
So I wonder if there are simple solution to make form submission asyncronous?
Thanks
P.S. I added JQuery UI dialog on submit "wait please..." but I get still double commands.
UPDATE
As GeoffAtkins proposed I will:
disable submit after dialog is shown
make use of unique form's token (as it is already added by Symfony) Do not use Symfony token as unique form token as it is always the same for current session. Use just random or something like that.
I would consider doing this (jQuery since you said you used that)
$(function() {
$("#formId").on("submit",function() {
$("#submitBut").hide();
$("#pleaseWait").show();
});
});
if you submit the form and reload the page.
If you Ajax the order, then do
$(function() {
$("#formId").on("submit",function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var $theForm = $(this);
$("#submitBut").hide();
$("#pleaseWait").show();
$.post($(this).attr("action"),$(this).serialize(),function() {
$theForm.reset();
$("#submitBut").show(); // assuming you want the user to order more stuff
$("#pleaseWait").hide();
});
});
});
NOTE that disabling the submit button on click of the submit button may stop the submission all together (at least in Chrome): https://jsfiddle.net/mplungjan/xc6uc46m/
Just disable the button on click, something like:
$("#my-button-id").on("click", function() {
$(this).attr("disabled", "disabled");
});
var bool = true;
function onclick()
{
if(bool)
{
//do stuff
bool = false;
}
else
{
//ignore
}
}
You could disable the button on the form when it is clicked, and then continue to perform the action. You would probably change the text to say "loading..." or some such.
You may also want to re-enable the button on fail or complete of the ajax request.
I've done this many times similar to this: https://stackoverflow.com/a/19220576/89211

disable button in a <li>

okay, if I have six buttons in a list, under the li tag (each on is rel to a part of an array), how can I disable a button while it's doing it's thing? (In this case playing a video)I know it's a little vague (i haven't supplied code or anything of the sort), but that's because I don't know how to go about it. If I could at least get pointed in the right direction, that would be helpful, so that even if I can't figure it out, at least I can be specific with my problem... thanks...EDIT this is what I've now done
<li rel='1' id="first">
<div style="top:0px;">
<img src="graphics/filler.png" alt="" width="280" height="128" onClick="asess"/>
</div>
</li>
and then added the corresponding function
function asess() {
document.getElementById("first").disabled = true;
}
I'm not to concerned with adding the function back just yet, because first I'd like to make this part work.EDIT I've got this, which should work, but I guess it's not "talking" to the button?
$("li, .thumbs").bind("touchstart click", function() {
var $this = $(this);
if (!document.getElementById("first").disabled) {
document.getElementById("first").disabled = true }
else {document.getElementById("first").disabled = false};
});
I know it will only talk to the button with that id (first one) but as long as I can make it work for one, I can do the rest. So, what am I doing wrong?
Each button will have an onclick event handler. To prevent the onclick handler from doing anything the JavaScript method attached to the handler should return false. If you are doing this with jQuery return false; is the same as calling e.preventDefault (or event.preventDefault for IE).
When the normal event handler initiates the action associated with the button it should add the event handler that disables the onclick action.
You will probably need to apply a new CSS style to the button as well so the user knows it's disabled.
When the action completes you need to remove event handler that disables the onclick action and use the normal one again.
You could always just use a flag to say an action is in progress and set this on and off with the actions. If the flag is on then the event handler method returns false.
By using the event handler you could also show an alert to the user when they try and click the button before you return false.
EDIT:
Here is the sort of JavaScript you'll need, the first click starts the process which will stop itself after five seconds using setTimeout('stopAction()', 5000);. If you click the item again during that time you get the wait message.
I would recommend you look at using jQuery to develop a robust cross browser solution.
var inProgress = false;
function asess() {
if(inProgress) {
alert('Please wait ...');
return false;
} else {
startAction();
}
}
function startAction() {
inProgress = true;
alert('Starting');
document.getElementById("first").style.backgroundColor = '#333333';
setTimeout('stopAction()', 5000);
}
function stopAction() {
inProgress = false;
alert('Stopping');
document.getElementById("first").style.backgroundColor = '#FFFFFF';
}
document.getElementById("my_button").disabled = true;
and when you're done.
document.getElementById("my_button").disabled = false;
You could "disable" the element within the click handler and re-enable it when the callback is executed successfully.
Click handler binding to elements with disabled="disabled" attribute is not guaranteed to be consistently implemented across browsers (i.e. the event could/would still fire) and is not allowed except on form elements anyway. I'd just add class="disabled" which gives me additional powers to style the disabled element state by, say, greying it out.
Oh, and jQuery. Naturally, this logic could be reproduced in "normal" javascript but is so tidier with library usage, fiddle:
$('#my-button').click(function() {
var $this = $(this); //cache the reference
if (!$this.hasClass('disabled')) {
$this.addClass('disabled');
alert('hello world!');
setTimeout(function($btn) {
$btn.removeClass('disabled');
}, 5000, $this);
} else {
return false;
}
});

Disabling an element from being clicked after it is clicked

I have a button that saves the content that a user edits. I do not want them to hit the save button multiple times because of the load it causes on the server. I want to disable the button after they click on it.
Here is what I have attempted(doesn't work, though):
var active = true;
$("#save").click(function() {
if (!active) return;
active = false;
........
........
........
active = true;
The problem is that the user can still click on the element multiple times.
How can I fix this problem?
Edit: Sorry, I forgot to mention that I want to enable the click after the onclick code has finished executing.
Try this
$("#save").one('click', function() {
//this function will be called only once even after clicking multiple times
});
There is a disabled attribute: http://jsfiddle.net/uM9Md/.
$("#save").click(function() {
$(this).attr('disabled', true)
........
........
........
$(this).attr('disabled', false)
});
You can unbind the click handler, but I would go with .one as per #ShankarSangoli's answer (+1).
$("#save").click(function() {
// do things
$(this).unbind("click");
});
http://api.jquery.com/unbind/
If the element is an input you can do this really easily:
<input name="BUTTON" type="submit" value="Submit" onSubmit="document.BUTTON.disabled = true;">
That's some handy HTML Javascript integration stuff there.
Assuming:
<input type="button" id="save" ... />
You can either do:
$('#save').click(function(){
var $save = $(this);
//
// save code
//
$save.get(0).disabled = true;
});
Which disabled the button natively, or you can use jQuery's one functionality:
$('#save').one('click',function(){
//
// save code
//
});
Which will only execute once and must be re-bound. (But if you're deciding to enable/disable based on parameters, using the disabled attribute is probably a better choice.)

How can I prevent button-mashing when using anchors instead of buttons?

I'm using buttons to submit data via Ajax. I'm using jQuery to disable and enable the buttons. This is to prevent "button-mashing," where a user can fire multiple requests either maliciously or unwittingly.
Is there an "element-agnostic" way to prevent this behavior in jQuery? For example, say I wanted to use anchors instead of buttons to submit the data. A button I can disable; but as far as I know you can not disable anchors.
Here is how I'm doing this now: (note I've removed some of the unnecessary code to make it shorter)
$('.fav .button').click(function() {
$.ajax({
context: this,
dataType: 'json',
beforeSend: function() {
// Toggle state; disable button to prevent button mashing
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", true);
},
error: function() {
// Rollback state and re-enable button on error
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
},
success: function(response) {
if (response.result == "success") {
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
}
else {
// Rollback state; re-enable button
$(".fav").toggleClass("fav-state-1");
$(".fav .button").attr("disabled", false);
}
}
});
return false;
});
HTML:
<input class="button" type="button" value="">
Of course, the best way to do this would be to handle it gracefully on the server side.
That said, you could use the data storage methods in jQuery to store a value to indicate it has already been clicked, and use that to determine if the user has already clicked/pressed the button. The values get stored per selector, so you can set it on anything.
$("a").click(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
if (!$(this).data('isClicked')) {
var link = $(this);
// Your code on successful click
// Set the isClicked value and set a timer to reset in 3s
link.data('isClicked', true);
setTimeout(function() {
link.removeData('isClicked')
}, 3000);
} else {
// Anything you want to say 'Bad user!'
}
});
The benefit is that you're not stopping the user from clicking anything else, as it's a per element solution. In your case, you might want to do the link.removeData in the success function.
Example of it working: http://jsfiddle.net/jonathon/ke8Az/ (Note that if you try to click again within the 3s, you get the 'Please wait' but you can still click the rest)
Note: This is a client side solution only. And only if they have JavaScript installed. Unless you handle it on the server side, the user can maliciously send multiple requests. This just helps with the 'unwittingly' part.
Before the ajax call you could unbind the click event on the clicked object, then in the success / error method you could rebind the click event.
That way they can mash the button as much as they want but it wont have the click wired up until the call has finished.
You could do the following:
setup a variable clickedWithinLastSecond.
in the method that fires the request, check if it is true, if it is then don't send the request
If it is not send the request and set the variable to true. Setup a method that fires after a second with setTimeout that changes the variable back to false.
you will have to customize variable name to your needs, and you will need to find a way to keep the variable in the correct scopes, but that is not difficult.
The best and only way to stop the behavior you are describing is on the server side.
You can also use debounce to register only one click. Both underscore.js and lodash.js provide this handy method.
Here's a fiddle to demo the concept. With lazyClick, you can double/triple click on the link yet the event handler is fired only once.
var lazyClick = _.debounce(onclickHandler, 500);
function onclickHandler(e){
e.preventDefault();
console.log('clicked');
}
$(function(){
// uncomment this and you will see double clicks are being registered.
//$('#btn').click(onclickHandler);
// with debounce, only one click will be registered
$('#btn').click(lazyClick);
});

Disable click handler when click is fired in jQuery

We have a website built in .NET and jQuery. We have custom jQuery to call the load method on a processing ASP.NET page. That ajax call is fired in a click handler, e.g.
$("#Submit").click(function(){
$(a_selector).load("Process.aspx?data=" + someDataObject, null, function(){
alert("Done")});
}
return false;
);
Our issue is when we hit the #Submit button the click is fired which calls the ajax to process it. People seem to be double-clicking the button and therefore we're getting multiple results in our database from the dual clicks. Does anyone have an idea on how to prevent this issue? I considered something like disabling the button via JS but I'd like to know of other ideas.
Use the one function of jQuery. This way, the event is only ever fired once. Of course, you should also disable the button so the user knows that clicking on it is futile. In addition, show a spinner, progress bar, or change the cursor styling to indicate to the user that something is happening and the system isn't stuck.
stop propagation
$("#Submit").click(function(event){
event.stopPropagation();
if (typeof $_submitSend == "undefined")
var $_submitSend = true;
else if ($_submitSend == true)
return false;
$_submitSend = true;
$(this).attr("disabled", "disabled");
$(a_selector).load("Process.aspx?data=" + someDataObject, null, function(){
alert("Done")});
$_submitSend = false;
$(this).removeAttr("disabled");
}
);
$("#Submit").click(function(){
$(a_selector).removeClass("class").load("Process.aspx?data=" + someDataObject, null, function(){
$(this).addClass("class");
alert("Done")});
}
return false;
);
Then just add some specific class without any styling which you will use as a selector. Dont know if it will work the way you want, but it looks like simplest solution to me... :)

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