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Home/ Questions/Q 621603
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T18:53:34+00:00 2026-05-13T18:53:34+00:00

The dynamically added links (classnames .divToggle and .removeDiv ) only function if clicked twice

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The dynamically added links (classnames .divToggle and .removeDiv) only function if clicked twice the first time. What is preventing them from working properly right away?

$(document).ready(function(){
    // adds click event to links.
    $('a.divToggle').live('click', function(event) {
        // Toggles the visibility of divs.
        event.preventDefault;
        $(this).toggle(function(){
                $(this).next(".divToToggle").slideUp("slow");
                $(this).text("show[+]");
        },
        function(){
                $(this).next(".divToToggle").slideDown("slow");
                $(this).text("hide[-]");
        });     
    });
    
    // used to remove divs from the page.
    $("a.removeDiv").live("click", function(event) {
        event.preventDefault;
        $(this).parent().prev("a").prev("h2").remove();
        $(this).parent().prev("a").remove();
        $(this).parent().next("br").remove();
        $(this).parent().remove();  
    }); 
    
    // Used to add new divs to the page.
    $(".addDiv").click(function(){
        $("<h2>Title Area</h2><a href='#' class='divToggle'>hide[-]</a>"
        + "<div class='divToToggle'><a href='#' class='removeDiv'>Remove this div</a>"
        + "<ul><li>List element 1</li><li>List element 2</li>"
        + "<li>List element 3</li></ul></div><br />").insertBefore($(this));
    });
});
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T18:53:35+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:53 pm

    $(...).toggle doesn’t do anything straight away. It just binds click events to the selected elements, so that in the future clicking causes one of the two functions to be called. So the first click does nothing but set up the toggle event handler. The second click actually calls the toggle event handler. (And also adds another toggle event handler! So the third click calls two toggle event handlers, and so on.)

    .toggle is an alternative to .click binding, not something you would (normally) use inside a .click event handler.

    There is no ‘live’ version of toggle, but you can write one yourself, eg.:

    function livetoggle(selector, f0, f1) {
        $(selector).live('click', function(event) {
            var t= $(this).data('livetoggle');
            $(this).data('livetoggle', !t);
            (t? f1 : f0).call(this, event);
        });
    }
    
    
    livetoggle('a.divToggle', function() {
        ...
    }, function() {
        ...
    });
    
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