it is very fun!  why?

2009/6/14 MorningZ <morni...@gmail.com>

>
> "I thought it should have worked but it doesn't"
>
> You cannot pass params like that in a click event
>
> instead of
>
> $(document).ready(function(){
>  $("#moon").click(myFunction("param"));
>  $("#earth").click(myFunction("param2"));
>
>  function myFunction(param){
>    alert(param);
>  }
> });
>
>
> use
>
> $(document).ready(function(){
>    $("#moon").click(function() { myFunction("param"); });
>    $("#earth").click(function() { myFunction("param2"); });
> });
>
> function myFunction(param){
>    alert(param);
> }
>
>
>  On Jun 13, 12:07 pm, Mirko Galassi <mirko.gala...@ymail.com> wrote:
> > Hi guys, apologize for posting again the same topic. I haven't found a
> solution yet for my simple problem. I have a simple function that works when
> a link is clicked $(document).ready(function(){ $("#moon").click(function(){
> alert("do something"); }); }); I need to reuse that function passing a
> parameter so I modified the function like that $(document).ready(function(){
> $("#moon").click(myFunction("param"));
> $("#earth").click(myFunction("param2")); function myFunction(param){
> alert(param); } }); I thought it should have worked but it doesn't. In fact,
> when the page has loaded even without clicking the first and second
> istructions are executed: $("#moon").click(myFunction("param"));
> $("#earth").click(myFunction("param2")); whereas with the following case
> $("#moon").click(function(){ alert("do something"); }); the function need to
> be activate by a click any idea? Thanks a lot c
>

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