The problem lies within this block of code:
$("#email-freq").val(3).on("click focus", function() { $("#email-enable").prop("checked", true); });
$("#email-notify").keyup(enableSave);
$("#email-enable, #email-freq, #optOutEmail, #optInNewFeatures, #optInTipsAndRecommendations").change(enableSave);
On line three of the block, jQuery is used to select elements matching a number of selectors, on of those being #email-enable
. The code then assigns a "change" event listener to those elements.
Before that line one defines the mechanism for the drop down menu enabling the checkbox as setting the 'checked' attribute of the checkbox to checked. Makes sense right? If we set the checkbox to checked, the status of the checkbox changes. Wrong.
Check out the following quote from Web/Events/change on MDN:
The change event is fired for <input>
, <select>
, and <textarea>
elements when a change to the element's value is committed by the user. Unlike the input event, the change event is not necessarily fired for each change to an element's value.
...
Depending on the kind of form element being changed and the way the
user interacts with the element, the change event fires at a different
moment:
- When the element is activated (by clicking or using the keyboard) for
<input type="radio">
and <input type="checkbox">
;
- When the user
commits the change explicitly (e.g. by selecting a value from a
<select>
's dropdown with a mouse click, by selecting a date from a
date picker for <input type="date">
, by selecting a file in the file
picker for <input type="file">
, etc.);
- When the element loses focus
after its value was changed, but not commited (e.g. after editing the
value of
<textarea>
or <input type="text">
).
From that quote we find out that it isn't as cut and dry as you might think, and in fact it turns out that changing the checked
attribute of a checkbox does not trigger a change event, even though the state of the checkbox has changed.
This is demonstrated in the following example:
const i = document.querySelector('input'), b = document.querySelector('button');
i.addEventListener('change', () => console.log('changed'), false);
b.addEventListener('click', () => i.checked = true, false);
<input type="checkbox">
<button>click</button>
However, you can just check the current state, and trigger a click event (in turn causing the state to change and trigger a change event) if the checkbox is not currently checked.
const i = document.querySelector('input'), b = document.querySelector('button');
i.addEventListener('change', () => console.log('changed'), false);
b.addEventListener('click', () => !i.checked && i.click(), false);
<input type="checkbox">
<button>click</button>