jQuery .on() method - passing argument to event handler function
You can pass extra data to an event handling function and can be accessed using event.data
within the handler.
$(document).on('dblclick', '#an_tnam tr', { extra : 'random string' }, function(event)
{
var data = event.data;
// Prints 'random string' to the console
console.log(data.extra);
}
You can also send extra data to any event you like when triggering the event from an external source using the .trigger()
method
$('#an_tnam tr').trigger('click', [{ extra : 'random string' }]);
The difference with passing data to the .trigger()
method is that .on()
expects the handler to take extra arguments of the length of the array passed in. The above would expect the handler to have (only) one extra argument to contain the object passed in.
$('#an_tnam tr').on('click', function(event, obj)
{
// Prints 'random string' to the console
console.log(obj.extra);
}
The .on()
function expects a function reference to be passed; what you're doing is calling the function and passing its return value. If you need to pass a parameter you'll need to wrap the call in an anonymous function.
$(document).on('dblclick', '#an_tnam tr', function(event) {
ADS('hello');
});
jQuery always passes its normalized event object as the first argument to the function to be executed.