hx-trigger
The hx-trigger
attribute allows you to specify what triggers an AJAX request. A trigger
value can be one of the following:
every <timing declaration>
A standard event, such as click
can be specified as the trigger like so:
<div hx-get="/clicked" hx-trigger="click">Click Me</div>
Events can be filtered by enclosing a boolean javascript expression in square brackets after the event name. If
this expression evaluates to true
the event will be triggered, otherwise it will be ignored.
<div hx-get="/clicked" hx-trigger="click[ctrlKey]">Control Click Me</div>
This event will trigger if a click event is triggered with the event.ctrlKey
property set to true.
Conditions can also refer to global functions or state
<div hx-get="/clicked" hx-trigger="click[checkGlobalState()]">Control Click Me</div>
And can also be combined using the standard javascript syntax
<div hx-get="/clicked" hx-trigger="click[ctrlKey&&shiftKey]">Control-Shift Click Me</div>
Note that all symbols used in the expression will be resolved first against the triggering event, and then next
against the global namespace, so myEvent[foo]
will first look for a property named foo
on the event, then look
for a global symbol with the name foo
Standard events can also have modifiers that change how they behave. The modifiers are:
once
- the event will only trigger once (e.g. the first click)changed
- the event will only change if the value of the element has changed. Please pay attention change
is the name of the event and changed
is the name of the modifier.delay:<timing declaration>
- a delay will occur before an event triggers a request. If the event
is seen again it will reset the delay.throttle:<timing declaration>
- a throttle will occur after an event triggers a request. If the event
is seen again before the delay completes, it is ignored, the element will trigger at the end of the delay.from:<Extended CSS selector>
- allows the event that triggers a request to come from another element in the document (e.g. listening to a key event on the body, to support hot keys)
from:input
would listen on every input on the page.document
- listen for events on the documentwindow
- listen for events on the windowclosest <CSS selector>
- finds the closest ancestor element or itself, matching the given css selectorfind <CSS selector>
- finds the closest child matching the given css selectortarget:<CSS selector>
- allows you to filter via a CSS selector on the target of the event. This can be useful when you want to listen for
triggers from elements that might not be in the DOM at the point of initialization, by, for example, listening on the body,
but with a target filter for a child elementconsume
- if this option is included the event will not trigger any other htmx requests on parents (or on elements
listening on parents)queue:<queue option>
- determines how events are queued if an event occurs while a request for another event is in flight. Options are:
first
- queue the first eventlast
- queue the last event (default)all
- queue all events (issue a request for each event)none
- do not queue new eventsHere is an example of a search box that searches on keyup
, but only if the search value has changed
and the user hasn’t typed anything new for 1 second:
<input name="q"
hx-get="/search" hx-trigger="keyup changed delay:1s"
hx-target="#search-results"/>
The response from the /search
url will be appended to the div
with the id search-results
.
There are some additional non-standard events that htmx supports:
load
- triggered on load (useful for lazy-loading something)revealed
- triggered when an element is scrolled into the viewport (also useful for lazy-loading). If you are using overflow
in css like overflow-y: scroll
you should use intersect once
instead of revealed
.intersect
- fires once when an element first intersects the viewport. This supports two additional options:
root:<selector>
- a CSS selector of the root element for intersectionthreshold:<float>
- a floating point number between 0.0 and 1.0, indicating what amount of intersection to fire the event onHX-Trigger
headerIf you’re trying to fire an event from HX-Trigger
response header, you will likely want to
use the from:body
modifier. E.g. if you send a header like this HX-Trigger: my-custom-event
with a response, an element would likely need to look like this:
<div hx-get="/example" hx-trigger="my-custom-event from:body">
Triggered by HX-Trigger header...
</div>
in order to fire.
This is because the header will likely trigger the event in a different DOM hierarchy than the element that you wish to be triggered. For a similar reason, you will often listen for hot keys from the body.
By using the syntax every <timing declaration>
you can have an element poll periodically:
<div hx-get="/latest_updates" hx-trigger="every 1s">
Nothing Yet!
</div>
This example will issue a GET
to the /latest_updates
URL every second and swap the results into
the innerHTML of this div.
If you want to add a filter to polling, it should be added after the poll declaration:
<div hx-get="/latest_updates" hx-trigger="every 1s [someConditional]">
Nothing Yet!
</div>
Multiple triggers can be provided, separated by commas. Each trigger gets its own options.
<div hx-get="/news" hx-trigger="load, click delay:1s"></div>
This example will load /news
immediately on page load, and then again with a delay of one second after each click.
The AJAX request can be triggered via JavaScript htmx.trigger()
, too.
hx-trigger
is not inheritedhx-trigger
can be used without an AJAX request, in which case it will only fire the htmx:trigger
event