Hi Eric, thanks for response. Yes, it works that way, but it's kind of unflexible and may be impossible to implement when dealing with more complex code, don't you think?
On 27 янв, 17:29, Eric Garside <gars...@gmail.com> wrote: > I believe it has to do with the new event propogation model > implemented with 1.3 > > Instead, try using a living event: > > <ul> > <li></li> > <li></li> > <li></li> > <li></li> > <li></li> > </ul> > > $('ul li span').live('click', function(){ > // ... > > }); > > $('ul li').append('<span>Click me</span>'); > > That should work. > > On Jan 27, 8:15 am, errant <d.cheka...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Here is the code: > > > HTML: > > > <ul> > > <li></li> > > <li></li> > > <li></li> > > <li></li> > > <li></li> > > </ul> > > > JS: > > > $(function(){ > > > var handle = $('<span>Click me</span>'); > > handle.click(function() { > > alert('Thanks'); > > }); > > $('ul li').append(handle); > > > }); > > > With jQuery 1.2.6, each time I click on any list's element it shows > > alert. With 1.3.1 in FF3, Safari 3 & Opera 9.63 alert is only > > displaying when I click on first element. In IE6,7 everything is ok. > > Is this some kind of bug? > >