With firebug or web inspector you can use monitorEvents
:
monitorEvents(myDomElem);
This prints all events emitted by myDomElem
to the console. Use unmonitorEvents
to stop monitoring events.
If you’re interested in getting events after the DOM has been manipulated, take a look at Mutation Events.
Edit:
As far as I know, there is no easy way to intercept all onreadystatechange
events from all XMLHttpRequest. The only work-around I can think of is to override the native XMLHttpRequest object with you own implementation. For example:
(function() { // Overriding XMLHttpRequest
var oldXHR = window.XMLHttpRequest;
function newXHR() {
var realXHR = new oldXHR();
realXHR.addEventListener("readystatechange", function() {
console.log("an ajax request was made")
}, false);
return realXHR;
}
window.XMLHttpRequest = newXHR;
})();
Needless to say this is extremely hacky and generally ill-advised.