jQuery $(document).ready() not firing - asp.net

Using jQuery 1.4.2 from Google hosted Code.
Is there a reason why the following javascript does not fire all 3 document.ready functions when the document is ready?
The first $(document).ready() function, which renders headers, and the second, which gives a 'Foo' alert box triggered, but subsequent ones in new <script> blocks aren't triggered,
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function () {
Cufon.replace('h1'); // Works without a selector engine
Cufon.replace('h2'); // Works without a selector engine
Cufon.replace('h3'); // Works without a selector engine
Cufon.now();
});
$(document).ready(function () { alert("Number Foo"); });
</script>
// html tags
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function () { alert("Number One"); });
$(document).ready(function () { alert("Number Two"); });
</script>
These are in seperate web parts, hosted on the same page in Sharepoint2010

I can think of three forensic things to try, right off:
try it with non-google-hosted
libraries.
comment out the Cufon
calls -- I believe Cufon does some
crazy stuff to download additional
resources, yes? That may be
interfering.
sub in
$(window).load() for one or more
of your $(document).ready()
callback defs. They have different
firing criteria --
$(window).load() waits for
everything to load up, allegedly --
but the substitution may be
revealing.
Of course, console.log() and alert() will be your in-leu-of-debugger-breakpoint best friends in this case.

you're missing a closing curly bracket and parenthesis in the second script tag

You are missing a }); in the end of the last $(document).ready
Once you correct this it should work
EDIT:
Since you say now that each script tag is in a separate web part I believe the problem itself is not in the scripts. Something else in your page is messing up your code.

Related

Why do my MVC application gives errors on a cloud server? [duplicate]

I have a simple jquery click event
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$('#post').click(function() {
alert("test");
});
});
</script>
and a jquery reference defined in the site.master
<script src="<%=ResolveUrl("~/Scripts/jquery-1.3.2.js")%>" type="text/javascript"></script>
I have checked that the script is being resolved correctly, I'm able to see the markup and view the script directly in firebug, so I must be being found. However, I am still getting:
$ is not defined
and none of the jquery works. I've also tried the various variations of this like $(document).ready and jQuery etc.
It's an MVC 2 app on .net 3.5, I'm sure I'm being really dense, everywhere on google says to check the file is referenced correctly, which I have checked and checked again, please advise! :/
That error can only be caused by one of three things:
Your JavaScript file is not being properly loaded into your page
You have a botched version of jQuery. This could happen because someone edited the core file, or a plugin may have overwritten the $ variable.
You have JavaScript running before the page is fully loaded, and as such, before jQuery is fully loaded.
First of all, ensure, what script is call properly, it should looks like
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
and shouldn't have attributes async or defer.
Then you should check the Firebug net panel to see if the file is actually being loaded properly. If not, it will be highlighted red and will say "404" beside it. If the file is loading properly, that means that the issue is number 2.
Make sure all jQuery javascript code is being run inside a code block such as:
$(document).ready(function () {
//your code here
});
This will ensure that your code is being loaded after jQuery has been initialized.
One final thing to check is to make sure that you are not loading any plugins before you load jQuery. Plugins extend the "$" object, so if you load a plugin before loading jQuery core, then you'll get the error you described.
Note: If you're loading code which does not require jQuery to run it does not need to be placed inside the jQuery ready handler. That code may be separated using document.readyState.
It could be that you have your script tag called before the jquery script is called.
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/script.js"></script>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
This results as $ is not defined
Put the jquery.js before your script tag and it will work ;) like so:
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/script.js"></script>
First you need to make sure that jQuery script is loaded. This could be from a CDN or local on your website. If you don't load this first before trying to use jQuery it will tell you that jQuery is not defined.
<script src="jquery.min.js"></script>
This could be in the HEAD or in the footer of the page, just make sure you load it before you try to call any other jQuery stuff.
Then you need to use one of the two solutions below
(function($){
// your standard jquery code goes here with $ prefix
// best used inside a page with inline code,
// or outside the document ready, enter code here
})(jQuery);
or
jQuery(document).ready(function($){
// standard on load code goes here with $ prefix
// note: the $ is setup inside the anonymous function of the ready command
});
please be aware that many times $(document).ready(function(){//code here}); will not work.
If the jQuery plugin call is next to the </body>, and your script is loaded before that, you should make your code run after window.onload event, like this:
window.onload = function() {
//YOUR JQUERY CODE
}
`
so, your code will run only after the window load, when all assets have been loaded. In that point, the jQuery ($) will be defined.
If you use that:
$(document).ready(function () {
//YOUR JQUERY CODE
});
`
the $ isn't yet defined at this time, because it is called before the jQuery is loaded, and your script will fail on that first line on console.
I just did the same thing and found i had a whole lot of
type="text/javacsript"
So they were loading, but no further hint as to why it wasn't working. Needless to say, proper spelling fixed it.
Use a scripts section in the view and master layout.
Put all your scripts defined in your view inside a Scripts section of the view. This way you can have the master layout load this after all other scripts have been loaded. This is the default setup when starting a new MVC5 web project. Not sure about earlier versions.
Views/Foo/MyView.cshtml:
// The rest of your view code above here.
#section Scripts
{
// Either render the bundle defined with same name in BundleConfig.cs...
#Scripts.Render("~/bundles/myCustomBundle")
// ...or hard code the HTML.
<script src="URL-TO-CUSTOM-JS-FILE"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function () {
// Do your custom javascript for this view here. Will be run after
// loading all the other scripts.
});
</script>
}
Views/Shared/_Layout.cshtml
<html>
<body>
<!-- ... Rest of your layout file here ... -->
#Scripts.Render("~/bundles/jquery")
#Scripts.Render("~/bundles/bootstrap")
#RenderSection("scripts", required: false)
</body>
</html>
Note how the scripts section is rendered last in the master layout file.
It means that your jQuery library has not been loaded yet.
You can move your code after pulling jQuery library.
or you can use something like this
window.onload = function(){
// Your code here
// $(".some-class").html("some html");
};
As stated above, it happens due to the conflict of $ variable.
I resolved this issue by reserving a secondary variable for jQuery with no conflict.
var $j = jQuery.noConflict();
and then use it anywhere
$j( "div" ).hide();
more details can be found here
make sure you really load jquery
this is not jquery - it's the ui!
<script language="JavaScript"
src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.10.0/jquery-ui.min.js">
</script>
This is a correct script source for jquery:
<script language="JavaScript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
Are you using any other JavaScript libraries? If so, you will probably need to use jQuery in compatibility mode:
http://docs.jquery.com/Using_jQuery_with_Other_Libraries
after some tests i found a fast solution ,
you can add in top of your index page:
<script>
$=jQuery;
</script>
it work very fine :)
I had the same problem and resolved it by using
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => {
// code here
});
I got the same error message when I misspelled the jQuery reference and instead of type="text/javascript" I typed "...javascirpt". ;)
It sounds like jQuery isn't loading properly. Which source/version are you using?
Alternatively, it could a be namespace collision, so try using jQuery explicitly instead of using $. If that works, you may like to use noConflict to ensure the other code that's using $ doesn't break.
That error means that jQuery has not yet loaded on the page. Using $(document).ready(...) or any variant thereof will do no good, as $ is the jQuery function.
Using window.onload should work here. Note that only one function can be assigned to window.onload. To avoid losing the original onload logic, you can decorate the original function like so:
originalOnload = window.onload;
window.onload = function() {
if (originalOnload) {
originalOnload();
}
// YOUR JQUERY
};
This will execute the function that was originally assigned to window.onload, and then will execute // YOUR JQUERY.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decorator_pattern for more detail about the decorator pattern.
I use Url.Content and never have a problem.
<script src="<%= Url.Content ("~/Scripts/jquery-1.4.1.min.js") %>" type="text/javascript"></script>
In the solution it is mentioned -
"One final thing to check is to make sure that you are not loading any plugins before you load jQuery. Plugins extend the "$" object, so if you load a plugin before loading jQuery core, then you'll get the error you described."
For avoiding this -
Many JavaScript libraries use $ as a function or variable name, just as jQuery does. In jQuery's case, $ is just an alias for jQuery, so all functionality is available without using $. If we need to use another JavaScript library alongside jQuery, we can return control of $ back to the other library with a call to $.noConflict():
I had this problem once for no apparent reason. It was happenning locally whilst I was running through the aspnet development server. It had been working and I reverted everything to a state where it had previously been working and still it didn't work. I looked in the chrome debugger and the jquery-1.7.1.min.js had loaded without any problems. It was all very confusing. I still don't know what the problem was but closing the browser, closing the development server and then trying again sorted it out.
Just place jquery url on the top of your jquery code
like this--
<script src="<%=ResolveUrl("~/Scripts/jquery-1.3.2.js")%>" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$('#post').click(function() {
alert("test");
});
});
</script>
I had the same problem and it was because my reference to the jQuery.js was not in the tag. Once I switched that, everything started working.
Anthony
Check the exact path of your jquery file is included.
<script src="assets/plugins/jquery/jquery.min.js"></script>
if you add this on bottom of your page , please all call JS function below this declaration.
Check using this code test ,
<script type="text/javascript">
/***
* Created by dadenew
* Submit email subscription using ajax
* Send email address
* Send controller
* Recive response
*/
$(document).ready(function() { //you can replace $ with Jquery
alert( 'jquery working~!' );
});
Peace!
This is the common issue to resolve this you have to check some point
Include Main Jquery Library
Check Cross-Browser Issue
Add Library on TOP of the jquery code
Check CDNs might be blocked.
Full details are given in this blog click here
I came across same issue, and it resolved by below steps.
The sequence of the scripts should be as per mentioned below
<script src="~/Scripts/jquery-3.3.1.min.js"></script>
<script src="~/Scripts/jquery-ui.js"></script>
<script src="~/Scripts/bootstrap.min.js"></script>
This sequence was not correct for my code, I corrected this as per the above and it resolved my issue of Jquery not defined.
We have the same problem....but accidentally i checked folder properties and set something...
You have to check the properties of each folders that you're accessing..
right click folder
'permissions' tab
set the folder access :
OWNER: create and delete files
GROUP: access files
OTHERS: access files
I hope that this is the solution......
When using jQuery in asp.net, if you are using a master page and you are loading the jquery source file there, make sure you have the header contentplaceholder after all the jquery script references.
I had a problem where any pages that used that master page would return '$ is not defined' simply because the incorrect order was making the client side code run before the jquery object was created. So make sure you have:
<head runat="server">
<script type="text/javascript" src="Scripts/jquery-VERSION#.js"></script>
<asp:ContentPlaceHolder id="Header" runat="server"></asp:ContentPlaceHolder>
</head>
That way the code will run in order and you will be able to run jQuery code on the child pages.
In my case I was pointing to Google hosted JQuery. It was included properly, but I was on an HTTPS page and calling it via HTTP. Once I fixed the problem (or allowed insecure content), it fired right up.
After tried everything here with no result, I solved the problem simply by moving the script src tag from body to head
I was having this same problem and couldn't figure out what was causing it. I recently converted my HTML files from Japanese to UTF-8, but I didn't do anything with the script files. Somehow jquery-1.10.2.min.js became corrupted in this process (I still have no idea how). Replacing jquery-1.10.2.min.js with the original fixed it.
it appears that if you locate your jquery.js files under the same folder or in some subfolders where your html file is, the Firebug problem is solved. eg if your html is under C:/folder1/, then your js files should be somewhere under C:/folder1/ (or C:/folder1/folder2 etc) as well and addressed accordingly in the html doc. hope this helps.
I have the same issue and no case resolve me the problem. The only thing that works for me, it's put on the of the Site.master file, the next:
<script src="<%= ResolveUrl("~/Scripts/jquery-1.7.1.min.js") %>" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="<%= ResolveUrl("~/Scripts/bootstrap/js/bootstrap.min.js") %>" type="text/javascript"></script>
With src="<%= ResolveUrl("")... the load of jQuery in the Content Pages is correct.

Javascript Issue with Ajax reloading grid

I have this script in the tag that's making the header row in the grid frozen.
It's working good, but after I add a row to the grid with Ajax, the row goes back to regular mode, and it's not frozen anymore.
What am I missing?
<script type = "text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function () {
$('#<%=gvPayments.ClientID %>').Scrollable({
ScrollHeight: 500
});
});
</script>
Thanks.
Actually I believe the problem is $(document).ready() isn’t called after an asynchronous postback, so I suggest you have a look at this page:
http://web.archive.org/web/20101109152029/http://blog.dreamlabsolutions.com/post/2009/02/24/jQuery-document-ready-and-ASP-NET-Ajax-asynchronous-postback.aspx

Is it mandatory to write ready function every time while doing jquery?

Is it mandatory to write $(document).ready(function () {... }) every time ?
Can't we do it without this line?
The reason for placing your code inside this function is that it will get called once the DOM has loaded - meaning that all the elements are accessible. Calling jQuery selectors without this function means that the elements have not necessarily been loaded into the DOM and might not be accessible (and you'll see weird results or nothing at all from your code).
So in essense, yes, it is necessary.
$(document).ready makes sure your code runs when the document is ready (i.e. fully loaded). If you don't need to interact with the document, you don't need this. If you put your Javascript at the end of the document, you probably don't need it either. You should put your code into a function () { } though to namespace it either way.
$(document).ready means the code inside this box will be executed once the all document is ready (loaded). It is considered as safe programming but not mandatory.
For example you call a function in script tag do_something(); and this function is in a js file which is not loaded yet then you will get javascript error.
If you put function like this
$(document).ready(function () {
do_something();
});
you are making sure that when function get called all js files will be there to server.
If you don't use that line, and just include the javascript in your body, it will execute as soon as it's loaded. If it's trying to act on DOM elements that have not yet loaded, unpredictable results will occur.... better to be safe than sorry.
jQuery's ready() function is run after the page's content is loaded. This is relatively equivalent to using <body onload="function1();function2();">
If you want to call multiple functions when the page is done loading, you can do the following:
$(document).ready(function() {
function1();
function2();
});
In order to use javascript, you must call it somewhere. This can be in body "onload", jQuery's ready() function, or an event, like a mouse click event.
No you don't always have to do this. You only use it if you want to make sure whatever is inside the ready function loads before the page is displayed in the browser. If you do not care to load the script before page load, then you can just put the script at the end of the page before the closing body tag.
Also As a shortcut to $(document).ready(function () you can do $(function()

Getting width of an existing div with jQuery returns null

I have an ASP.NET reportviewer in a page whose width (a div width) I am trying to determine.
I have the test code below. The first alert returns the proper client id. I can see the div in the html source. I can see its width in FireBug. However the second alert returns null. The syntax looks fine. Why is it returning null?
<script type="text/javascript" src="includes/jquery-1.4.2.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
alert('<%=rvMain.ClientID %>');
alert( $('#<%=rvMain.ClientID %>').width() );
</script>
Have your elements loaded at the time that javascript fires? Try using a document.ready
call and see if you get the same result.
Are you wrapping that code in $(document).ready(function () { /* code */ });? If not, you may be trying to reference an element that doesn't yet exist in the DOM.
However the answers above are correct but if you are not using jquery then you can use a trick which is to do the javascript calling at the end of the document.
this happens because the order in which the files are received from server are different and javascript execution happens as soon as it loads

Postpone Postback For 3 Seconds?

I have a usercontrol with a couple of drop downs Lists and a button, I want the user to click the button (Which response.redirects depending on the selection in the DDL's).
Now instead of redirecting straight away, I want to display a little loading icon for 3 seconds and then redirect... Has anyone done anything like this?
An artificial delay where none is needed is kinda lame. What you can do instead is on submission of your form display your throbber. I use the following on a document upload form where large media files are being posted.
<script type="text/javascript" id="PreJavaScript">
function NUsubmit(){
document.getElementById("uploadFormInputs").style.display = 'none';
document.getElementById("progressBar").style.display = 'block';
return true;
};
function init() { document.getElementById("UploadFormObject").onsubmit = NUsubmit; };
window.onload = init;
</script>
If I remember correctly, in some versions of IE the animated gif didn't play but it worked fine in IE6+ and FireFox.
This way if the postback is quick they never see the throbber but if it takes a while they see it and it gives them the sense that something is happening.
You can perform delays with the setTimeout() function in javascript.
setTimeout(function() { alert('After 5 seconds.'); }, 5000);
You're probably going to need to override a couple things in your Javascript and use a "setTimeout" to delay the loading.
<script type="text/javascript" >
var __handleSubmit = theForm.submit;
theForm.onsubmit = function() {
alert('loading'); //Show your message here
window.setTimeout(function() {
__handleSubmit();
}, 3000);
}
</script>
You might want to play with a bit more... this is may not work for all instances since I've never done it.
If the delay is simply for "aesthetics", to make it appear it is working, then I'd recommend against it - programmers appear to be the only people that think loading bars are cool :)
Looks like you should implement this page using AJAX. You can place a progress indictor on your page to alert the user that a long running process is taking place.
I got this working by using
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(4000);
In the postback

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