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This function works perfectly on IE, Firefox and Chrome but when on the iPhone, it will only work when clicking on a <img>. Clicking on the page (anywhere but on a img) wont fire the event.

$(document).ready(function () {
  $(document).click(function (e) {
    fire(e);
  });
});

function fire(e) { alert('hi'); }

The HTML part is extremely basic and shouldnt be a problem.

Any ideas?

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2  
it is my understanding that on iPhone you never actually raise click events... isn't there something like a touch event? – Nico Sep 14 '10 at 3:36
2  
Small point: you could also write ".click(fire);" – Christopher Hunt Sep 14 '10 at 4:50
probably could Christopher. Its just example code though. – Garrows Sep 14 '10 at 12:54

4 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

Adding in the following code works.

The problem is iPhones dont raise click events. They raise "touch" events. Thanks very much apple. Why couldn't they just keep it standard like everyone else? Anyway thanks Nico for the tip.

Credit to: http://ross.posterous.com/2008/08/19/iphone-touch-events-in-javascript

$(document).ready(function () {
  init();
  $(document).click(function (e) {
    fire(e);
  });
});

function fire(e) { alert('hi'); }

function touchHandler(event)
{
    var touches = event.changedTouches,
        first = touches[0],
        type = "";

    switch(event.type)
    {
       case "touchstart": type = "mousedown"; break;
       case "touchmove":  type = "mousemove"; break;        
       case "touchend":   type = "mouseup"; break;
       default: return;
    }

    //initMouseEvent(type, canBubble, cancelable, view, clickCount, 
    //           screenX, screenY, clientX, clientY, ctrlKey, 
    //           altKey, shiftKey, metaKey, button, relatedTarget);

    var simulatedEvent = document.createEvent("MouseEvent");
    simulatedEvent.initMouseEvent(type, true, true, window, 1, 
                          first.screenX, first.screenY, 
                          first.clientX, first.clientY, false, 
                          false, false, false, 0/*left*/, null);

    first.target.dispatchEvent(simulatedEvent);
    event.preventDefault();
}

function init() 
{
    document.addEventListener("touchstart", touchHandler, true);
    document.addEventListener("touchmove", touchHandler, true);
    document.addEventListener("touchend", touchHandler, true);
    document.addEventListener("touchcancel", touchHandler, true);    
}
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Change this:

$(document).click( function () {

To this

$(document).on('click touchstart', function () {

Tada!

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Use jQTouch instead - its jQuery's mobile version

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5  
The official mobile version of jQuery is jQuery Mobile (but jQTouch is also pretty good). – BoltClock Sep 14 '10 at 3:40
is it downloadable already? last time i heard it was still conceptual – lock Sep 14 '10 at 8:08
   
Sadly, it did not work. I did only include the library without changing my javascript. It seems like jQTouch should overload the $(document).click function. – Garrows Sep 14 '10 at 10:48

On mobile iOS the click event does not bubble to the document body and thus cannot be used with .live() events. If you have to use a non native click-able element like a div or section is to use cursor: pointer; in your css for the non-hover on the element in question. If that is ugly you could look into delegate().

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