EDIT FOR CLARIFICATION:
What I want:
A full screen javascript canvas which can handle touch events without those events being further interpreted by the browser, but also reserve the ability to open a new window on user action.
Examples:
I should be able to swipe my finger around without the webpage trying to scroll
I should be able to swipe my finger around without the contents of the webpage being nudged in any way (normally, when one scrolls to the end of a scroll region, the browser allows some additional spring-loaded buffer scrolling to signal to the user that it is the end of the scroll region).
I should be able to pinch and pan without the webpage zooming
etc...
The point:
I need to interpret these events accurately and in realtime MYSELF to respond to these actions WITHIN THE CANVAS. (I am doing realtime drawing via requestAnimationFrame, allowing me to react to user events without using the DOM)
The state of things currently:
This all works perfectly (except for the ability to open a new window) because I position the canvas to be the full size of the viewport (handling any window resize events), and the canvas listens to ontouchstart, ontouchmove, ontouchend, etc... events, calling evt.preventDefault() after I have handled the user input myself. This works to ensure the canvas is ALWAYS full screen, doesn't budge, and user input is accurately given to me to handle in-game.
The Problem:
One bit of user input I need to handle is the launching of a webpage when they click the region of my canvas with a "launch my webpage" button. However, window.open(mywebpage) doesn't work, because mobile safari only allows such an action in the callstack of a click event. Because I rely on ontouchstart to get responsive controls, and evt.preventDefault() in an ontouchstart event CANCELS the click event from happening, I cannot launch the webpage (it gets blocked by the browser).
My attempted solutions, and why they are insufficient:
Just use a click event rather than ontouchstart: this means I can't prevent scrolling/etc... additionally, it is not as responsive, and doesn't allow me to handle touch-and-drag events well.
Overlay a div (or an a) tag atop the canvas over the launch webpage zone, and add a click event to that: if the user clicks-and-drags starting within this tag, then it allows the page to scroll and zoom. Trying to fix this results in the same problem as before.
ORIGINAL POST:
I have a mobile application that is a full-screen canvas, which locks itself positionally (can't scroll or zoom) so that I can correctly interpret user input uninterrupted (swipes, pans, etc...).
It locks itself in by intercepting touchstart events and calling evt.preventDefault (as well as the meta viewport no-zoom stuff which as far as I can tell doesn't actually do anything?).
This works great, and is absolutely necessary to make a game (or game-like application) function.
The problem is that I also have a "go to this webpage" button. I can intercept the touchstart, and use window.open(somewebpage), but mobile popup blockers will block it. The "rules" seem to be "the webpage will be allowed to be opened iff it is done in the call stack of a user interaction, AND that interaction is a 'click' event".
I have the first part down, but if I change the event to a click event, the web page now interprets swipes as scrolls (and pinches as zooms, etc...). If I have both a click and a touchstart event, then calling evt.preventDefault() on the touchstart (which stops the scroll/zoom) also stops the click event.
If I overlay a div atop the click zone of the "launch webpage" button, then the player can scroll/zoom when their input begins in that button, which results in an unpredictable and wonky experience.
How can I launch another webpage without allowing the current webpage to scroll?
Edit: at request, here is a code snippet at least partially illustrating what I'm trying to do https://jsfiddle.net/phildo/0q8e47fk/10/.
Note that in the "real" case, the canvas takes up the full width/height of the screen, and is explicitly set accordingly on screen resize.
Preventing bounces of any kind on mobile web page is a vast problem through out the mobile devices not depending about the manufacturer. I had similar issue on Windows Phone 8 app years ago and there (quite surprisingly) was a solution dedicated to Windows environment which of course cannot applied here.
For iOS you need an iOS solution, right?
The very solution is named iNoBounce. The idea is to add the little js library to your html page, code with some good conventions and the js lib will do the dirty job of preventing the default when necessary.
The trick it actually does is not to prevent just anything, but the ones only, that are "extra" and will cause the bounce events.
With the words of iNoBounce GitHub Readme:
iNoBounce detects if the browser supports -webkit-overflow-scrolling by checking for the property on a fresh CSSStyleDeclaration. If it does, iNoBounce will listen to touchmove and selectively preventDefault() on move events that don't occur on a child of an element with -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch set. In addition, iNoBounce will preventDefault() when the user is attemping to scroll past the bounds of a scrollable element, preventing rubberbanding on the element itself (an unavoidable caveat).
The example code asks you to use the following parts (there is a separate example code for canvas, this is only the most common solution):
// All you need is an element with `height` or `max-height`, `overflow: auto` and `-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch`.
<script src="inobounce.js"></script>
<style>
ul {
height: 115px;
border: 1px solid gray;
overflow: auto;
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
}
</style>
Source:
[1] https://github.com/lazd/iNoBounce
Edit:
I found out you did not limit yourself to iOS. For other browsers, try
[2] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/overscroll-behavior
which introduces overscroll-behavior setting, that you can set to none to disable bounces.
It will work only on Android, not ie or iOS.
For mobile Windows Phone I had the solution like this:
div.wp8ScrollFix {
-ms-touch-action: none;
}
which effectively does the same as iNoBounce, now with single CSS line for the div containing the canvas.
Edit2:
For a search of semi universal solution, I could find that
-touch-action: none;
applied to div element that includes the canvas, you can disable default touch events and for the canvas, define your own.
The solution works on any other than Safari browsers. As in [3] there may be some variants like
-ms-touch-action: none;
but I suppose they are now all same without prefixes. The [3] solution is very old and world has changed a lot from those days.
The sad thing is, the browser support is same at least 2019 [4] and maybe now also.
Sources:
[3] jQuery / HTML5 / gwt app for WP8 (Lumia 920) device: vertical css scroll fix
[4] https://css-tricks.com/almanac/properties/t/touch-action/
Problem
Show a div on top of full screen canvas element that intercepts normal click events on element canvas.
Solution
Aside from click events, you need to intrrcept the following touch events:
touchstart
touchend
touchmove
touchcancel
Additional Info
You only preventDefault on the canvas events so you should still be able to create a clickable/touchable element in the canvas that shows a div outside the canvas positioned with a z-index higher than the canvas element by setting on display: block on the div. The div should also have 100vh and 100vw set foe width and height respectively and be position: fixed. The div should also have a button to hide again display: none.
References
https://stackoverflow.com/a/51127296/806876
A web page I am developing has mouse over events (both css and javascript) for a top navigation bar. It works fine when the browser window is floating, but when maximized (full screen) the hover classes have no effect anymore. It begins to act like a tablet display, I must point and click for my hover actions to take effect. I achieve the events when I click, but mouse hover changes my cursor to a text select cursor.
This does not happen on a windows computer
As a matter of fact, this behaviour is good if it is meant to support tablets but I'd appreciate if anybody could let me know if this is a bug or intended?
This is a 3+ year old unfixed bug in Chromium.
http://crbug.com/170058
I wonder if there's any way to detect if the user made a two-finger tap on the MacBook trackpad with JavaScript or jQuery. In one of the projects I'm detecting right mouse click with JavaScript and using it for some actions. It actually doesn't work when you make a double finger tap on a trackpad. While in action that works as a right click, but JavaScript can't detect it like so.
Any clues?
You can use the mouse events button property - MDN reference
A value of 1 would be the indicator of a left click
A value of 2 would be the indicator of a right click.
Demo jsFiddle
When I use Fabric.js to generate canvas, there is annoying flickering when tapped with finger in iPad (mini) and iPhone (4). The flickering is like canvas goes fast to black and then white again.
Steps to reproduce:
With iPad or iPhone surf to eg. this line drawing utility:
http://jsfiddle.net/fabricjs/URWru/
(function dummy{})
Put your finger on to the canvas and lift it then back. Do this fast, as you do when clicking with mouse. The flickering occurs when finger is up. If you hold your finger a second or more on the canvas and then lift back, the flickering doesn't occur.
Why the flickering occurs and what could be done to prevent it?
This is Q&A style answer.
The solution is simple. Add this to css:
canvas {
-webkit-tap-highlight-color:rgba(0,0,0,0);
}
Ryan Grove describes the reason in yuiblog.com:
"Unfortunately, Mobile Safari has no way to distinguish between normal click subscribers and delegated click subscribers, which is when the click event is attached to a container rather than to each child of that container. As a result, a delegated click will result in the entire container being highlighted rather than just the item that was tapped, and this can be both ugly and confusing for the user."
This trick is reported to work at least: Android based browsers, iPhone Safari, iPad Safari, iPad Chrome.
I'm playing around with the bonsai.js library, and I added a big stage to the hero section of my site. However, in Chrome, when the mouse is over the stage (between the tagline and blue button outline), I am unable to scroll down or up. In Firefox and Safari I am still able to scroll. Why is Chrome acting up?
Site: http://cainternet.herokuapp.com
I dont know the bonsai.js library, but probably it is, because the bonsai.js library uses the wheel event and stops it from bubbling in a way, that it only affects chrome. Check the web for "Event Bubbling" for about this topic and check the event usage in your bonsai lib.