I figured it had to be possible some way. Thank you for pointing me in the right direction.
On Dec 4, 7:55 am, Karl Swedberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > This FAQ topic should help: > > http://docs.jquery.com/Frequently_Asked_Questions#Why_do_my_events_st... > > Also, for cloning elements using jQuery 1.2, you can use .clone(true) > to copy the events along with the elements. See: > > http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/clone#true > > Hope that helps. > > --Karl > _________________ > Karl Swedbergwww.englishrules.comwww.learningjquery.com > > On Dec 4, 2007, at 1:05 AM, m j wrote: > > > > > > > I am using JQuery and JQuery UI. I'm using tabs from the UI part. > > > I'm trying to build a form dynamically adding and removing input > > elements on the fly. I would expect someone else has tried this > > before, and that there is an existing implementation somewhere that > > works. > > > Here is a page with my example problem: > >http://www.shelfnet.com/new_tab_form_test/new_tab_form_test.html > > > In my examples I've tried doing this three different ways. The third I > > know I must be doing something wrong because IE at least dumps an > > error, and so does FireFox. The first two examples work perfectly in > > FireFox, but when you add a new tab and it clones the HTML from the > > first tab IE doesn't cooperate with adding the change event to the new > > HTML. > > > With Example 1, this was my first attempt and I noticed some odd > > behavior on IE where the JQuery call to the element's attribute name > > returns the new value, but if you try and get the .html() from the > > element it reflects the change to the name element as not having any > > effect. I'm not sure what is working and what's not. When I submitted > > the form it seemed to send the changed names... so I'm guessing JQuery > > might be doing a few things behind the scenes. > > > I thought I'd try changing the name attributes in the HTML before it > > got added to the DOM, so in Example 2 and 3 I use a regex to modify > > the name element before the HTML is appended. In the end the affect > > appears to be good across the board, but it still doesn't trigger the > > change events on the form elements. > > > In Example 3 I made an ATTEMPT, though unsuccessful, to include an > > onclick attribute in the actual HTML of the select element to call a > > javascript function, but I must not be referencing the function name > > correctly. At least IE triggers it though because it spits out an > > error.- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -