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 Posted by Bas Cost Budde on 05/21/07 21:55 
I usually catch the submit action from the submit button. Would you care  
to see what that gives? The event procedure must cancel the default  
action, cross-browser... let me look this one up... nah, return false  
will do. 
 
Does that help enough? 
 
Yow, now I re-read your snippet, something strikes me: inside the inline  
onsubmit definition, there is no need to put 'javascript:'. Maybe that  
is all it takes. 
 
Uit het bericht van Jerry Stuckle: 
> Tomislav wrote: 
>> 
>>> Your best bet is javascript - it works, just ensure you have  
>>> javascript enabled.  Or you can take them to a new "confirm" window.   
>>> If they confirm then continue.  If they do not, return to the  
>>> previous page. 
>> 
>> Thank you for your quick response. Below is code snippet I use as 
>> template to construct my own JavaScript code. 
>> 
>> ** 
>> 
>> <form method="post" action="mail.php" onSubmit="javascript:return 
>> confirm('Do you really want to send this order ?);"> 
>> 
>> ** 
>> 
>> When I include Submit button in this form form action should be  
>> performed, e.g. "mail.php" should be executed. Only thing is that it  
>> is executed directly without any confirm windows. 
>> 
>> JS is enabled and browser is Firefox 2.0. What is more I frequently  
>> use JS in my designs and this very site I am working on now has plenty  
>> of JS included. That is a bit confusing - that code above does not work. 
>> 
>> Did I miss something when I incorporated JS in form ? 
>> 
>> Thanks, 
>> 
>> Tomislav 
>  
> Sorry, I don't know - I'm not that great on javascript.  Try  
> comp.lang.javascript for javascript questions. 
>
 
  
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