You can very easily override the val
function to trigger change by replacing it with a proxy to the original val
function.
just add This code somewhere in your document (after loading jQuery)
(function($){
var originalVal = $.fn.val;
$.fn.val = function(){
var result =originalVal.apply(this,arguments);
if(arguments.length>0)
$(this).change(); // OR with custom event $(this).trigger('value-changed');
return result;
};
})(jQuery);
A working example: here
(Note that this will always trigger change
when val(new_val)
is called even if the value didn't actually changed.)
If you want to trigger change ONLY when the value actually changed, use this one:
//This will trigger "change" event when "val(new_val)" called
//with value different than the current one
(function($){
var originalVal = $.fn.val;
$.fn.val = function(){
var prev;
if(arguments.length>0){
prev = originalVal.apply(this,[]);
}
var result =originalVal.apply(this,arguments);
if(arguments.length>0 && prev!=originalVal.apply(this,[]))
$(this).change(); // OR with custom event $(this).trigger('value-changed')
return result;
};
})(jQuery);
Live example for that: http://jsfiddle.net/5fSmx/1/