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Events Callbacks
This event gets fired everytime when the main tail.select dropdown opens / gets visible. You can only hook the main tail.select container, available through the internal variable <instance>.select
, which requires the additional event prefix: tail::open
.
BUT: The easiest way is to use our public method .on("open", function(){})
This event gets fired everytime when the main tail.select dropdown closes / gets invisible. You can only hook the main tail.select container, available through the internal variable <instance>.select
, which requires the additional event prefix: tail::close
.
BUT: The easiest way is to use our public method .on("close", function(){})
This event gets fired everytime when a option gets enabled, disabled, selected or unselected. You can also hook the source select field (using "change" or "input" as event name) but this way will "only" receive selections and unselections, or you can hook yourself to the tail.select container, available through the internal variable <instance>.select
, which requires the additional event prefix: tail::change
.
BUT: The easiest way is to use our public method .on("change", function(item, state){})
Your callback function receives 2 parameters:
-
item
The current / concerned item object -
state
The respective state ("select", "deselect", "enable", "disable")
You can hook your own function to the cbComplete
option, which gets triggered AFTER EACH initialization. The initialization (or init()
method) gets triggered on start as well as EVERYTIME when an option (or a bunch of option gets changed), or if your calling the .reload()
or .init()
method on your own, of course.
You can hook your own function to the cbLoopGroup
option to intervene or take over the render process for each single option group. Your own function receives 3 parameters:
-
group
The group label as string -
search
The search string (if it is a search), undefined otherwise -
root
The root "dropdown-inner" object.
Your own function SHOULD return an Element object, which gets added to the dropdown list, but you can also return null
to skip this single optgroup and false
to break the render process. Check out the How To page for more informations.
- The first or main "option group" is "#", if no optgroup element is defined at least.
- You MUST return an
<ul>
Element, if you're don't manipulatecbLoopItem
too! - You MUST render the
multiSelectGroup
elements on your own! - You MUST NOT add the global
data-group
attribute!
You can hook your own function to the cbLoopItem
option to intervene or take over the render process for each single option. Your own function receives 4 parameters:
-
item
The current item object, which should get rendered -
optgroup
The current "group" / "parent" Element -
search
The search string (if it is a search), undefined otherwise -
root
The root "dropdown-inner" object.
Your own function SHOULD return an Element object, which gets added to the dropdown list, but you can also return null
to skip this single option and false
to break the render process. Check out the How To page for more informations.
- You MUST return an
<li>
Element, if you're don't manipulatecbLoopGroup
too! - You MUST NOT add the global
data-key
ordata-group
attributes! - You MUST NOT add a click event handler!