How can I listen to the form submit event in javascript?

Why do people always use jQuery when it isn’t necessary?
Why can’t people just use simple JavaScript?

var ele = /*Your Form Element*/;
if(ele.addEventListener){
    ele.addEventListener("submit", callback, false);  //Modern browsers
}else if(ele.attachEvent){
    ele.attachEvent('onsubmit', callback);            //Old IE
}

callback is a function that you want to call when the form is being submitted.

About EventTarget.addEventListener, check out this documentation on MDN.

To cancel the native submit event (prevent the form from being submitted), use .preventDefault() in your callback function,

document.querySelector("#myForm").addEventListener("submit", function(e){
    if(!isValid){
        e.preventDefault();    //stop form from submitting
    }
});

Listening to the submit event with libraries

If for some reason that you’ve decided a library is necessary (you’re already using one or you don’t want to deal with cross-browser issues), here’s a list of ways to listen to the submit event in common libraries:

  1. jQuery

    $(ele).submit(callback);
    

    Where ele is the form element reference, and callback being the callback function reference. Reference

    <iframe width="100%" height="100%" src="http://jsfiddle.net/DerekL/wnbo1hq0/show" frameborder="0"></iframe>
  1. AngularJS (1.x)

    <form ng-submit="callback()">
    
    $scope.callback = function(){ /*...*/ };
    

    Very straightforward, where $scope is the scope provided by the framework inside your controller. Reference

  2. React

    <form onSubmit={this.handleSubmit}>
    
    class YourComponent extends Component {
        // stuff
    
        handleSubmit(event) {
            // do whatever you need here
    
            // if you need to stop the submit event and 
            // perform/dispatch your own actions
            event.preventDefault();
        }
    
        // more stuff
    }
    

    Simply pass in a handler to the onSubmit prop. Reference

  3. Other frameworks/libraries

    Refer to the documentation of your framework.


Validation

You can always do your validation in JavaScript, but with HTML5 we also have native validation.

<!-- Must be a 5 digit number -->
<input type="number" required pattern="\d{5}">

You don’t even need any JavaScript! Whenever native validation is not supported, you can fallback to a JavaScript validator.

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/DerekL/L23wmo1L/

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