Capturing and bubbling allow us to implement one of the most powerful event handling patterns called event delegation.
The idea is that if we have a lot of elements handled in a similar way, then instead of assigning a handler to each of them – we put a single handler on their common ancestor.
In the handler we get event.target
to see where the event actually happened and handle it.
Let’s see an example – the Ba-Gua diagram reflecting the ancient Chinese philosophy.
Here it is:
The HTML is like this:
<table>
<tr>
<th colspan="3"><em>Bagua</em> Chart: Direction, Element, Color, Meaning</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="nw"><strong>Northwest</strong><br>Metal<br>Silver<br>Elders</td>
<td class="n">...</td>
<td class="ne">...</td>
</tr>
<tr>...2 more lines of this kind...</tr>
<tr>...2 more lines of this kind...</tr>
</table>
The table has 9 cells, but there could be 99 or 9999, doesn’t matter.
Our task is to highlight a cell <td>
on click.
Instead of assign an onclick
handler to each <td>
(can be many) – we’ll setup the “catch-all” handler on <table>
element.
It will use event.target
to get the clicked element and highlight it.
The code:
let selectedTd;
table.onclick = function(event) {
let target = event.target; // where was the click?
if (target.tagName != 'TD') return; // not on TD? Then we're not interested
highlight(target); // highlight it
};
function highlight(td) {
if (selectedTd) { // remove the existing highlight if any
selectedTd.classList.remove('highlight');
}
selectedTd = td;
selectedTd.classList.add('highlight'); // highlight the new td
}
Such a code doesn’t care how many cells there are in the table. We can add/remove <td>
dynamically at any time and the highlighting will still work.
Still, there’s a drawback.
The click may occur not on the <td>
, but inside it.
In our case if we take a look inside the HTML, we can see nested tags inside <td>
, like <strong>
:
<td>
<strong>Northwest</strong>
...
</td>
Naturally, if a click happens on that <strong>
then it becomes the value of event.target
.
In the handler table.onclick
we should take such event.target
and find out whether the click was inside <td>
or not.
Here’s the improved code:
table.onclick = function(event) {
let td = event.target.closest('td'); // (1)
if (!td) return; // (2)
if (!table.contains(td)) return; // (3)
highlight(td); // (4)
};
Explanations:
- The method
elem.closest(selector)
returns the nearest ancestor that matches the selector. In our case we look for<td>
on the way up from the source element. - If
event.target
is not inside any<td>
, then the call returns immediately, as there’s nothing to do. - In case of nested tables,
event.target
may be a<td>
, but lying outside of the current table. So we check if that’s actually our table’s<td>
. - And, if it’s so, then highlight it.
As the result, we have a fast, efficient highlighting code, that doesn’t care about the total number of <td>
in the table.
Delegation example: actions in markup
There are other uses for event delegation.
Let’s say, we want to make a menu with buttons “Save”, “Load”, “Search” and so on. And there’s an object with methods save
, load
, search
… How to match them?
The first idea may be to assign a separate handler to each button. But there’s a more elegant solution. We can add a handler for the whole menu and data-action
attributes for buttons that has the method to call:
<button data-action="save">Click to Save</button>
The handler reads the attribute and executes the method. Take a look at the working example:
<div id="menu">
<button data-action="save">Save</button>
<button data-action="load">Load</button>
<button data-action="search">Search</button>
</div>
<script>
class Menu {
constructor(elem) {
this._elem = elem;
elem.onclick = this.onClick.bind(this); // (*)
}
save() {
alert('saving');
}
load() {
alert('loading');
}
search() {
alert('searching');
}
onClick(event) {
let action = event.target.dataset.action;
if (action) {
this[action]();
}
};
}
new Menu(menu);
</script>
Please note that this.onClick
is bound to this
in (*)
. That’s important, because otherwise this
inside it would reference the DOM element (elem
), not the Menu
object, and this[action]
would not be what we need.
So, what advantages does delegation give us here?
- We don’t need to write the code to assign a handler to each button. Just make a method and put it in the markup.
- The HTML structure is flexible, we can add/remove buttons at any time.
We could also use classes .action-save
, .action-load
, but an attribute data-action
is better semantically. And we can use it in CSS rules too.
The “behavior” pattern
We can also use event delegation to add “behaviors” to elements declaratively, with special attributes and classes.
The pattern has two parts:
- We add a custom attribute to an element that describes its behavior.
- A document-wide handler tracks events, and if an event happens on an attributed element – performs the action.
Behavior: Counter
For instance, here the attribute data-counter
adds a behavior: “increase value on click” to buttons:
Counter: <input type="button" value="1" data-counter>
One more counter: <input type="button" value="2" data-counter>
<script>
document.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
if (event.target.dataset.counter != undefined) { // if the attribute exists...
event.target.value++;
}
});
</script>
If we click a button – its value is increased. Not buttons, but the general approach is important here.
There can be as many attributes with data-counter
as we want. We can add new ones to HTML at any moment. Using the event delegation we “extended” HTML, added an attribute that describes a new behavior.
addEventListener
When we assign an event handler to the document
object, we should always use addEventListener
, not document.on<event>
, because the latter will cause conflicts: new handlers overwrite old ones.
For real projects it’s normal that there are many handlers on document
set by different parts of the code.
Behavior: Toggler
One more example of behavior. A click on an element with the attribute data-toggle-id
will show/hide the element with the given id
:
<button data-toggle-id="subscribe-mail">
Show the subscription form
</button>
<form id="subscribe-mail" hidden>
Your mail: <input type="email">
</form>
<script>
document.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
let id = event.target.dataset.toggleId;
if (!id) return;
let elem = document.getElementById(id);
elem.hidden = !elem.hidden;
});
</script>
Let’s note once again what we did. Now, to add toggling functionality to an element – there’s no need to know JavaScript, just use the attribute data-toggle-id
.
That may become really convenient – no need to write JavaScript for every such element. Just use the behavior. The document-level handler makes it work for any element of the page.
We can combine multiple behaviors on a single element as well.
The “behavior” pattern can be an alternative to mini-fragments of JavaScript.
Summary
Event delegation is really cool! It’s one of the most helpful patterns for DOM events.
It’s often used to add the same handling for many similar elements, but not only for that.
The algorithm:
- Put a single handler on the container.
- In the handler – check the source element
event.target
. - If the event happened inside an element that interests us, then handle the event.
Benefits:
- Simplifies initialization and saves memory: no need to add many handlers.
- Less code: when adding or removing elements, no need to add/remove handlers.
- DOM modifications: we can mass add/remove elements with
innerHTML
and the like.
The delegation has its limitations of course:
- First, the event must be bubbling. Some events do not bubble. Also, low-level handlers should not use
event.stopPropagation()
. - Second, the delegation may add CPU load, because the container-level handler reacts on events in any place of the container, no matter whether they interest us or not. But usually the load is negligible, so we don’t take it into account.