Sounds like a simple question. I've added a bit of jQuery magic:
$("#edit-save").click(function(event) {
$(this).attr("disabled", "true");
});
However, once this is in place, my form submit handler doesn't get called.
This is a custom form on my own path defined in hook_menu:
$items['my_form'] = array(
'title' => 'My form',
'page callback' => 'drupal_get_form',
'page arguments' => array('mymod_myform'),
'type' => MENU_CALLBACK,
);
In the form, I have a submit button and a cancel button:
$form['cancel'] = array(
'#type' => 'submit',
'#value' => t('Cancel'),
);
$form['save'] = array(
'#type' => 'submit',
'#value' => t('Save'),
);
and I define my own submit handler:
$form['#submit'][] = 'mymod_myform_submit';
I've put a bit of tracing code in the drupal_get_form() function to sniff the $_POST variable when the form is submitted. When the jQuery magic is disabled, the $_POST variable includes an "op" parameter:
Array
(
[op] = Save
[form_build_id] => form-6e74c87390e3fc48d0bebd2f5193315b
[form_token] => 33db6e34c0350e33c48861a63a38d45f
[form_id] => dh_seo_workload_item_form
)
but if I enable the jQuery magic to disable the submit button after it's been clicked, the "op" parameter is no longer included in the $_POST array, and so Drupal thinks the form has not been submitted.
I've seen the question at Prevent double submission of forms in jQuery, but am concerned that this seems like a really hacky fix, and there should be a better way.
Or you can do this, as a one-liner addition at the PHP form array level...
$form['submit'] = array(
'#type' => 'submit',
'#value' => t('Save'),
'#attributes' => array(
'onclick' => 'javascript:var s=this;setTimeout(function(){s.value="Saving...";s.disabled=true;},1);',
),
);