Hi Karl

You should have a look to Element.observe
With this method you can bind the listener to the object you want

The main difference is that you don't have the selector. Nevertheless,
thanks to $$ and invoke, you should get what you want

Guillaume
Le 21 déc. 2011 08:39, "kstubs" <[email protected]> a écrit :

> Api reads:
>
> callback (Function <http://api.prototypejs.org/language/Function/>) – The
> event handler function. Should expect two arguments: the event object *and
> * the element that received the event. (If selector was given, this
> element will be the one that satisfies the criteria described just above;
> if not, it will be the one specified in the element argument). This
> function is *always* bound to element.
>
> So this means there is no way to bind to a class, to *this* class?  Most
> of the time it makes sense that the event listener is bound to the class
> and not the element.  Are there any possibilities of allowing you to pass
> context to the on function?
>
> Karl..
>
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