Removing an anonymous event listener

JavascriptGreasemonkeyAddeventlistenerUserscripts

Javascript Problem Overview


Is there anyway to remove an event listener added like this:

element.addEventListener(event, function(){/* do work here */}, false);

Without replacing the element?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

There is no way to cleanly remove an event handler unless you stored a reference to the event handler at creation.

I will generally add these to the main object on that page, then you can iterate and cleanly dispose of them when done with that object.

Solution 2 - Javascript

You could remove the event listener like this:

element.addEventListener("click", function clicked() {
    element.removeEventListener("click", clicked, false);
}, false);

Solution 3 - Javascript

Anonymous bound event listeners

The easiest way to remove all event listeners for an element is to assign its outerHTML to itself. What this does is send a string representation of the HTML through the HTML parser and assign the parsed HTML to the element. Because no JavaScript is passed, there will be no bound event listeners.

document.getElementById('demo').addEventListener('click', function(){
    alert('Clickrd');
    this.outerHTML = this.outerHTML;
}, false);

<a id="demo" href="javascript:void(0)">Click Me</a>


Anonymous delegated event listeners

The one caveat is delegated event listeners, or event listeners on a parent element that watch for every event matching a set of criteria on its children. The only way to get past that is to alter the element to not meet the criteria of the delegated event listener.

document.body.addEventListener('click', function(e){
    if(e.target.id === 'demo') {
        alert('Clickrd');
        e.target.id = 'omed';
    }
}, false);

<a id="demo" href="javascript:void(0)">Click Me</a>

Solution 4 - Javascript

Old Question, but here is a solution.

Strictly speaking you can’t remove an anonymous event listener unless you store a reference to the function. Since the goal of using an anonymous function is presumably not to create a new variable, you could instead store the reference in the element itself:

element.addEventListener('click',element.fn=function fn() {
	//	Event Code
}, false);

Later, when you want to remove it, you can do the following:

element.removeEventListener('click',element.fn, false);

Remember, the third parameter (false) must have the same value as for adding the Event Listener.

However, the question itself begs another: why?

There are two reasons to use .addEventListener() rather than the simpler .onsomething() method:

First, it allows multiple event listeners to be added. This becomes a problem when it comes to removing them selectively: you will probably end up naming them. If you want to remove them all, then @tidy-giant’s outerHTML solution is excellent.

Second, you do have the option of choosing to capture rather than bubble the event.

If neither reason is important, you may well decide to use the simpler onsomething method.

Solution 5 - Javascript

You may try to overwrite element.addEventListener and do whatever you want.
Something like:

var orig = element.addEventListener;

element.addEventListener = function (type, listener) {
    if (/dontwant/.test(listener.toSource())) { // listener has something i dont want
        // do nothing
    } else {
        orig.apply(this, Array.prototype.slice.apply(arguments));
    }
};

ps.: it is not recommended, but it will do the trick (haven't tested it)

Solution 6 - Javascript

Assigning event handlers with literal functions is tricky- not only is there no way to remove them, without cloning the node and replacing it with the clone- you also can inadvertantly assign the same handler multiple times, which can't happen if you use a reference to a handler. Two functions are always treated as two different objects, even if they are character identical.

Solution 7 - Javascript

Edit: As Manngo suggested per comment, you should use .off() instead of .unbind() as .unbind() is deprecated as of jQuery 3.0 and superseded since jQuery 1.7.

Even though this an old question and it does not mention jQuery I will post my answer here as it is the first result for the searchterm 'jquery remove anonymous event handler'.

You could try removing it using the .off() function.

$('#button1').click(function() {
       alert('This is a test');
});

$('#btnRemoveListener').click(function() {
       $('#button1').off('click');
});

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<button id="button1">Click me</button>
<hr/>
<button id="btnRemoveListener">Remove listener</button>

However this only works if you've added the listener using jQuery - not .addEventListener

Found this here.

Solution 8 - Javascript

If you're using jQuery try off method

$("element").off("event");

Solution 9 - Javascript

Jquery .off() method removes event handlers that were attached with .on()

Solution 10 - Javascript

With ECMAScript2015 (ES2015, ES6) language specification, it is possible to do with this nameAndSelfBind function that magically turns an anonymous callback into a named one and even binds its body to itself, allowing the event listener to remove itself from within as well as it to be removed from an outer scope (JSFiddle):

(function()
{
  // an optional constant to store references to all named and bound functions:
  const arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions = [],
        removeEventListenerAfterDelay = 3000; // an auxiliary variable for setTimeout
  
  // this function both names argument function and makes it self-aware,
  // binding it to itself; useful e.g. for event listeners which then will be able
  // self-remove from within an anonymous functions they use as callbacks:
  function nameAndSelfBind(functionToNameAndSelfBind,
                           name = 'namedAndBoundFunction', // optional
                           outerScopeReference)            // optional
  {
    const functionAsObject = {
                                [name]()
                                {
                                  return binder(...arguments);
                                }
                             },
          namedAndBoundFunction = functionAsObject[name];
    
    // if no arbitrary-naming functionality is required, then the constants above are
    // not needed, and the following function should be just "var namedAndBoundFunction = ":
    var binder = function() 
    { 
      return functionToNameAndSelfBind.bind(namedAndBoundFunction, ...arguments)();
    }
    
    // this optional functionality allows to assign the function to a outer scope variable
    // if can not be done otherwise; useful for example for the ability to remove event
    // listeners from the outer scope:
    if (typeof outerScopeReference !== 'undefined')
    {
      if (outerScopeReference instanceof Array)
      {
        outerScopeReference.push(namedAndBoundFunction);
      }
      else
      {
        outerScopeReference = namedAndBoundFunction;
      }
    }
    return namedAndBoundFunction;
  }
  
  // removeEventListener callback can not remove the listener if the callback is an anonymous
  // function, but thanks to the nameAndSelfBind function it is now possible; this listener
  // removes itself right after the first time being triggered:
  document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", nameAndSelfBind(function(e)
  {
    e.target.removeEventListener('visibilitychange', this, false);
    console.log('\nEvent listener 1 triggered:', e, '\nthis: ', this,
                '\n\nremoveEventListener 1 was called; if "this" value was correct, "'
                + e.type + '"" event will not listened to any more');
  }, undefined, arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions), false);
  
  // to prove that deanonymized functions -- even when they have the same 'namedAndBoundFunction'
  // name -- belong to different scopes and hence removing one does not mean removing another,
  // a different event listener is added:
  document.addEventListener("visibilitychange", nameAndSelfBind(function(e)
  {
    console.log('\nEvent listener 2 triggered:', e, '\nthis: ', this);
  }, undefined, arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions), false);
  
  // to check that arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions constant does keep a valid reference to
  // formerly anonymous callback function of one of the event listeners, an attempt to remove
  // it is made:
  setTimeout(function(delay)
  {
    document.removeEventListener('visibilitychange',
             arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions[arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions.length - 1],
             false);
    console.log('\nAfter ' + delay + 'ms, an event listener 2 was removed;  if reference in '
                + 'arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions value was correct, the event will not '
                + 'be listened to any more', arrayOfFormerlyAnonymousFunctions);
  }, removeEventListenerAfterDelay, removeEventListenerAfterDelay);
})();

Solution 11 - Javascript

//get Event
let obj = window; //for example
let eventStr= "blur"; //for example
let index= 0; //you can console.log(getEventListeners(obj)[eventStr]) and check index
let e = getEventListeners(obj)[eventStr][index];
//remove this event
obj .removeEventListener(eventStr,e.listener,e.useCapture);

THE END :) i test in chrome 92, worked

Solution 12 - Javascript

How I used options parameter for my customEvent

options Optional
An object that specifies characteristics about the event listener. The available options are:
...
**once**
A boolean value indicating that the listener should be invoked at most once after being added. If true, the listener would be automatically removed when invoked.

for my custom function that I created, it worked quite nicely.

const addItemOpenEventListener = (item, openItem) => {
  document.addEventListener('order:open', ({detail}) => {
    if(detail.id === item.id) {
      openItem();
    }
  }, {once: true})
};

el.addItemOpenEventListener(item, () => dispatch(itemOpen)()));

checked my console, seems like it worked (any feedback appreciated!)

Solution 13 - Javascript

The following worked well enough for me. The code handles the case where another event triggers the listener's removal from the element. No need for function declarations beforehand.

myElem.addEventListener("click", myFunc = function() { /*do stuff*/ });

/*things happen*/

myElem.removeEventListener("click", myFunc);

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