Twitter Bootstrap / jQuery - How to temporarily prevent the modal from being closed?

BadHorsie picture BadHorsie · Nov 16, 2012 · Viewed 16.7k times · Source

I am using Twitter Bootstrap modals, with the default options where you can click the backdrop or press [Esc] to close the modal.

However, when I initiate an ajax operation in the modal I want to disable the modal from being closed in any way. So I disable buttons and hide the modal's close button but I can't figure out how to disable the backdrop and the [Esc] key.

I tried:

$('#myModal').modal({
    backdrop: 'static',
    keyboard: false
});

But this doesn't seem to work on the fly.

I will also need to re-enable the backdrop and keyboard once the ajax operation is finished.

Answer

davidkonrad picture davidkonrad · Nov 19, 2012

Note: This solution is targeting twitter bootstrap 2.x! See this answer (just below) for differences according to bootstrap 3.


Extending bootstrap modal functionality without modifying original source.

Thanks to @David and his suggestion at How to Extend Twitter Bootstrap Plugin I finally got it to work. It is a slightly modified version of his solution with modal "lock" added. I post it as a additional answer since I think it may could be a starting point for others that like me have struggled hard with this issue.

// save the original function object
var _superModal = $.fn.modal;

// add locked as a new option
$.extend( _superModal.defaults, {
    locked: false
});

// create a new constructor
var Modal = function(element, options) {
    _superModal.Constructor.apply( this, arguments )
}

// extend prototype and add a super function
Modal.prototype = $.extend({}, _superModal.Constructor.prototype, {
    constructor: Modal

    , _super: function() {
        var args = $.makeArray(arguments)
        // call bootstrap core
        _superModal.Constructor.prototype[args.shift()].apply(this, args)
    }

    , lock : function() {
        this.options.locked = true
    }

    , unlock : function() {
        this.options.locked = false
    }

    , hide: function() {
        if (this.options.locked) return
        this._super('hide')
    }
});

// override the old initialization with the new constructor
$.fn.modal = $.extend(function(option) {
    var args = $.makeArray(arguments),
    option = args.shift()

    // this is executed everytime element.modal() is called
    return this.each(function() {
        var $this = $(this)
        var data = $this.data('modal'),
            options = $.extend({}, _superModal.defaults, $this.data(), typeof option == 'object' && option)

        if (!data) {
            $this.data('modal', (data = new Modal(this, options)))
        }
        if (typeof option == 'string') {
            data[option].apply( data, args )
        }
    });
}, $.fn.modal);

With this technique it should not be nessecary to alter bootstrap.js, and the same functionality can more easily be shared among bootstrap projects. This method should be applicable to all the other bootstrap plugins. Have so far only tried with button though, but I cant se why it shouldnt.

see working fiddle -> http://jsfiddle.net/Sz7ZS/