Binding handlers in native API is done using addEventListener()
.
To emulate jQuery's event delegation, you could fairly easily create a system that uses the .matches()
method to test the selector you give.
function delegate(el, evt, sel, handler) {
el.addEventListener(evt, function(event) {
var t = event.target;
while (t && t !== this) {
if (t.matches(sel)) {
handler.call(t, event);
}
t = t.parentNode;
}
});
}
There are probably some tweaks to be made, but basically it's a function that takes the element to bind to, like document
, the event type, a selector and the handler.
It starts on the e.target
and traverses up the parents until it gets to the bound element. Each time, it checks to see if the current element matches the selector, and if so, it invokes the handler.
So you'd call it like this:
delegate(document, "click", ".some_elem", function(event) {
this.style.border = "2px dashed orange";
});
Here's a live demo that also adds dynamic elements to show that new elements are picked up as well.
function delegate(el, evt, sel, handler) {
el.addEventListener(evt, function(event) {
var t = event.target;
while (t && t !== this) {
if (t.matches(sel)) {
handler.call(t, event);
}
t = t.parentNode;
}
});
}
delegate(document, "click", ".some_elem", function(event) {
this.parentNode.appendChild(this.cloneNode(true));
this.style.border = "2px dashed orange";
});
<div>
<p class="some_elem">
<span>
CLICK ME
</span>
</p>
</div>
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