I have the following code that I want to use to search a database as a user is typing into a textbox. The code below works fine but it seems a little inefficient, as if a user is typing really fast. I am potentially doing many more searches than necessary. So if a user is typing in "sailing", I am searching on "sail", "saili", "sailin", and "sailing".
I wanted to see if there was a way to detect any particular time between keypresses so only search if user stops typing for 500 milliseconds or something like this.
Is there a best practice for something like this?
$('#searchString').keypress(function(e) {
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
var url = '/Tracker/Search/' + $("#searchString").val();
$.get(url, function(data) {
$('div#results').html(data);
$('#results').show();
});
}
else {
var existingString = $("#searchString").val();
if (existingString.length > 2) {
var url = '/Tracker/Search/' + existingString;
$.get(url, function(data) {
$('div#results').html(data);
$('#results').show();
});
}
}
You can do something like this:
$('#searchString').keyup(function(e) {
clearTimeout($.data(this, 'timer'));
if (e.keyCode == 13)
search(true);
else
$(this).data('timer', setTimeout(search, 500));
});
function search(force) {
var existingString = $("#searchString").val();
if (!force && existingString.length < 3) return; //wasn't enter, not > 2 char
$.get('/Tracker/Search/' + existingString, function(data) {
$('div#results').html(data);
$('#results').show();
});
}
What this does is perform a search (on keyup
, better than keypress
for these situations) after 500ms
by storing a timer on the #searchString
element's .data()
collection. Every keyup
it clears that timer, and if the key was enter, searches immediately, if it wasn't sets a another 500ms
timeout before auto-searching.