$.each duplicates 10 twice - javascript

When I have #sp-pocetna10 and #sp-pocetna1, script add #sp-pocetna10 after #sp-pocetna1 and at the end too.
These are ID of sections on one-page website, so I need to add class active on current section or viewport ( full screen all sections ).
If I add #sp-pocetna0, it will duplicate right before #sp-pocetna1.
Do you have any idea how can I remove that duplicated sections?
var slidnum = jQuery("div[id^='sp-pocetna']").length + 1;
console.log("Total Scrolls: "+slidnum);
jQuery(window).on('load resize scroll', function() {
for (i = 1; i < slidnum; i++) {
var strane = jQuery( "div[id^='sp-pocetna"+ i +"']" );
strane.each(function() {
console.log(this);
if (jQuery(this).isInViewport()) {
jQuery("#sp-dots .custom li:nth-child("+ i +") a").addClass("active");
//console.log("Jeste u VP:"+str);
} else {
jQuery("#sp-dots .custom li:nth-child("+ i +") a").removeClass("active");
//console.log("Nije u VP:"+str);
}
});
}
});

I think this is another place where you should rather use Intersection Observer instead of listening to scroll events. Scroll events are bad for performance and IO was built to handle cases like yours.
First you have to create a new observer:
var options = {
rootMargin: '0px',
threshold: 1.0
}
var observer = new IntersectionObserver(callback, options);
Here we specify that once the observed element is 100% visible, some callback should be executed. If you want the callback to be executed if an element is passing 50% visible, change threshold: .5 (or any other number you like)
Then you have to specify which items to observe, in your case I think this would be:
var target = document.querySelector('[id^=sp-pocenta]');
observer.observe(target);
With this selector you watch every element whose id start with sp-pocenta.
So we define that once any element that matches this selector is visible on the page, the callback (that was defined earlier) is getting executed:
var callback = function(entries, observer) {
entries.forEach(entry => {
// Each entry describes an intersection change for one observed
// target element:
});
};
Here you specify what should happen for each "sp-pocenta"-Element in your page that is getting visible.
Edit: If you need to support older browsers than use this (official) polyfill from w3c, it recreates intersection observer with listening to scroll events.

Related

Callback after element moved

I have list that scrolls up using velocity. I want to play sound each time, first visible item of the list scrolled up.
<div class="viewport" data-winner="">
<ul class="participants-holder container" id="ph">
<li>...<li> //many li elements
</ul>
</div>
moveToEl(name) {
...
$(container).velocity({
translateY: -(offsetToScroll)+'px'
}, {
duration: 15000,
easing: [.74,0,.26,1],
complete: (el) => {
...
// complete animation callback
},
progress: (els, complete, remaining, start, tweenVal) => {
console.log(Math.floor(complete * 100) + '%')
// I think some check should do during progress animation
}
})
}
How to handle event or track changes when each element or entire list are scrolled up by certain pixels, for instance 62px. How can I detect this and call callback function on this happened.
You can find the current TranslateY using something like
+this.container.style.transform.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '');
from https://stackoverflow.com/a/42267490/1544886, and compare it to the previous value plus an offset.
In the Roulette class add this.prevTranslatePos = 0.0; for storing the old value.
progress: (els, complete, remaining, start) => {
// from https://stackoverflow.com/a/42267490/1544886
var translatePos = +this.container.style.transform.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '');
if (translatePos >= (this.prevTranslatePos + 62))
{
//console.log(translatePos, this.prevTranslatePos);
this.prevTranslatePos = translatePos;
this.sound.pause();
this.sound.currentTime = 0;
this.sound.play();
}
}
Demo applied to the 'Go To' button only: http://codepen.io/anon/pen/yMXwgd?editors=1010
Note that the sound cuts out when it runs too quickly, but that could be handled a few different ways.
Add a scroll eventListener to the parent element of the list (I believe it's participants-holder in your case), and within that do a check for whether the right amount of pixels have moved since the last check. Store the current position, and compare it to the last time you moved the desired amount.
Hope that helps!

Javascript vertical scrolling function

I am trying to detect a scroll on my page using JavaScript. So that I can change classes and attributes of some elements when user has scrolled certain amount of page. This is my JS function:
function detectScroll() {
var header = document.querySelector(".headerOrig"),
header_height = getComputedStyle(header).height.split('px')[0],
fix_class = "changeColor";
if( window.pageYOffset > header_height ) {
header.classList.add(fix_class);
}
if( window.pageYOffset < header_height ) {
header.classList.remove(fix_class);
}
var change = window.setInterval(detectScroll, 5000);
}
and I am calling it when the page is loaded:
<body onload="detectScroll();">
However, I have this problem - I need to set up a really small interval so that the function gets called and the class is changed immediately. BUT then the page freezes and everything except the JS function works very slowly.
Is there any better way of achieving this in JavaScript?
Thanks for any advice/suggestion.
You are going to want to change a couple things. First, we can use onscroll instead of an interval. But you are also going to want to cache as much as possible to reduce the amount of calculations on your scroll. Even further, you should use requestAnimationFrame (or simply "debounce" in general for older browsers -- see the link). This ensures your work only happens when the browser is planning on repainting. For instance, while the user scrolls the actual scroll event may fire dozens of times but the page only repaints once. You only care about that single repaint and if we can avoid doing work for the other X times it will be all the more smoother:
// Get our header and its height and store them once
// (This assumes height is not changing with the class change).
var header = document.querySelector(".headerOrig");
var header_height = getComputedStyle(header).height.split('px')[0];
var fix_class = "changeColor";
// This is a simple boolean we will use to determine if we are
// waiting to check or not (in between animation frames).
var waitingtoCheck = false;
function checkHeaderHeight() {
if (window.pageYOffset > header_height) {
header.classList.add(fix_class);
}
if (window.pageYOffset < header_height) {
header.classList.remove(fix_class);
}
// Set waitingtoCheck to false so we will request again
// on the next scroll event.
waitingtoCheck = false;
}
function onWindowScroll() {
// If we aren't currently waiting to check on the next
// animation frame, then let's request it.
if (waitingtoCheck === false) {
waitingtoCheck = true;
window.requestAnimationFrame(checkHeaderHeight);
}
}
// Add the window scroll listener
window.addEventListener("scroll", onWindowScroll);
use onscroll instead of onload so you don't need to call the function with an interval.
Your dedectScroll function will be triggered automatically when any scroll appers if you use onscroll
<body onscroll="detectScroll();">
Your function is adding an interval recursively, you should add an event listener to the scroll event this way :
function detectScroll() {
var header = document.querySelector(".headerOrig"),
header_height = getComputedStyle(header).height.split('px')[0],
fix_class = "changeColor";
if( window.pageYOffset > header_height ) {
header.classList.add(fix_class);
}
if( window.pageYOffset < header_height ) {
header.classList.remove(fix_class);
}
}
window.addEventListener("scroll",detectScroll);

How to fadeIn element on page load instead of "appear"?

Im a really huge noob on jquery, I need to figure out how to change this code:
$('.social li').appear();
$(document.body).on('appear', '.social li', function(e, $affected) {
var fadeDelayAttr;
var fadeDelay;
$(this).each(function(){
if ($(this).data("delay")) {
fadeDelayAttr = $(this).data("delay")
fadeDelay = fadeDelayAttr;
} else {
fadeDelay = 0;
}
$(this).delay(fadeDelay).queue(function(){
$(this).addClass('animated').clearQueue();
});
})
});
to work in the way that it would start animation as soon as someone enters the landing page, right now it works good on everything besides IE10 and IE11, was told to change it to load by default not on "appear" but I tried document ready/load and I can't get it to work...
You could try fading all list items into view, each with a progessing 250ms delay:
$(window).load(function() {
$('.social li').hide().each(function(i) {
$(this).delay((i + 1) * 250).fadeIn(2000);
});
});
EDIT:
Using the same logic as your previous code to refactor, use the window.load method since the load event fires at the end of the document loading process. At this point, all of the objects in the document are in the DOM, and all the images and sub-frames etc have finished loading. So use this event to do the fading in animation of the list items into view, where their initial state will be hidden.
You have two variables declared fadeDelayAttr and fadeDelay but I noticed that only fadeDelay is being used, so fadeDelayAttr can be discarded. Also, this part of the code:
if ($(this).data("delay")) {
fadeDelayAttr = $(this).data("delay")
fadeDelay = fadeDelayAttr;
} else {
fadeDelay = 0;
}
can be simplified as the null-coalescing operator using a logical OR (||):
var fadeDelay = $(this).data("delay") || 0;
Since the fadeDelay variable gets its value from the data-delay attribute, this can then be passed in as an argument for the delay method and finally the refactored code will look like this:
$(window).load(function() {
$('.social li').hide().each(function() {
var fadeDelay = $(this).data("delay") || 0;
$(this).delay(fadeDelay).fadeIn(2000);
});
});
Working Demo

HTML5 dragleave fired when hovering a child element

The problem I'm having is that the dragleave event of an element is fired when hovering a child element of that element. Also, dragenter is not fired when hovering back the parent element again.
I made a simplified fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/pimvdb/HU6Mk/1/.
HTML:
<div id="drag" draggable="true">drag me</div>
<hr>
<div id="drop">
drop here
<p>child</p>
parent
</div>
with the following JavaScript:
$('#drop').bind({
dragenter: function() {
$(this).addClass('red');
},
dragleave: function() {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
});
$('#drag').bind({
dragstart: function(e) {
e.allowedEffect = "copy";
e.setData("text/plain", "test");
}
});
What it is supposed to do is notifying the user by making the drop div red when dragging something there. This works, but if you drag into the p child, the dragleave is fired and the div isn't red anymore. Moving back to the drop div also doesn't make it red again. It's necessary to move completely out of the drop div and drag back into it again to make it red.
Is it possible to prevent dragleave from firing when dragging into a child element?
2017 Update: TL;DR, Look up CSS pointer-events: none; as described in #H.D.'s answer below that works in modern browsers and IE11.
You just need to keep a reference counter, increment it when you get a dragenter, decrement when you get a dragleave. When the counter is at 0 - remove the class.
var counter = 0;
$('#drop').bind({
dragenter: function(ev) {
ev.preventDefault(); // needed for IE
counter++;
$(this).addClass('red');
},
dragleave: function() {
counter--;
if (counter === 0) {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
}
});
Note: In the drop event, reset counter to zero, and clear the added class.
You can run it here
Is it possible to prevent dragleave from firing when dragging into a child element?
Yes.
#drop * {pointer-events: none;}
That CSS seem to be enough for Chrome.
While using it with Firefox, the #drop shouldn't have text nodes directly (else there's a strange issue where a element "leave it to itself"), so I suggest to leave it with only one element (e.g., use a div inside #drop to put everything inside)
Here's a jsfiddle solving the original question (broken) example.
I've also made a simplified version forked from the #Theodore Brown example, but based only in this CSS.
Not all browsers have this CSS implemented, though:
http://caniuse.com/pointer-events
Seeing the Facebook source code I could find this pointer-events: none; several times, however it's probably used together with graceful degradation fallbacks. At least it's so simple and solves the problem for a lot of environments.
It has been quite some time after this question is asked and a lot of solutions (including ugly hacks) are provided.
I managed to fix the same problem I had recently thanks to the answer in this answer and thought it may be helpful to someone who comes through to this page.
The whole idea is to store the evenet.target in ondrageenter everytime it is called on any of the parent or child elements. Then in ondragleave check if the current target (event.target) is equal to the object you stored in ondragenter.
The only case these two are matched is when your drag is leaving the browser window.
The reason that this works fine is when the mouse leaves an element (say el1) and enters another element (say el2), first the el2.ondragenter is called and then el1.ondragleave. Only when the drag is leaving/entering the browser window, event.target will be '' in both el2.ondragenter and el1.ondragleave.
Here is my working sample. I have tested it on IE9+, Chrome, Firefox and Safari.
(function() {
var bodyEl = document.body;
var flupDiv = document.getElementById('file-drop-area');
flupDiv.onclick = function(event){
console.log('HEy! some one clicked me!');
};
var enterTarget = null;
document.ondragenter = function(event) {
console.log('on drag enter: ' + event.target.id);
enterTarget = event.target;
event.stopPropagation();
event.preventDefault();
flupDiv.className = 'flup-drag-on-top';
return false;
};
document.ondragleave = function(event) {
console.log('on drag leave: currentTarget: ' + event.target.id + ', old target: ' + enterTarget.id);
//Only if the two target are equal it means the drag has left the window
if (enterTarget == event.target){
event.stopPropagation();
event.preventDefault();
flupDiv.className = 'flup-no-drag';
}
};
document.ondrop = function(event) {
console.log('on drop: ' + event.target.id);
event.stopPropagation();
event.preventDefault();
flupDiv.className = 'flup-no-drag';
return false;
};
})();
And here is a simple html page:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>Multiple File Uploader</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="my.css" />
</head>
<body id="bodyDiv">
<div id="cntnr" class="flup-container">
<div id="file-drop-area" class="flup-no-drag">blah blah</div>
</div>
<script src="my.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
With proper styling what I have done is to make the inner div (#file-drop-area) much bigger whenever a file is dragged into the screen so that the user can easily drop the files into the proper place.
Here, the simplest Cross-Browser solution (seriously):
jsfiddle <-- try dragging some file inside the box
You can do something like that:
var dropZone= document.getElementById('box');
var dropMask = document.getElementById('drop-mask');
dropZone.addEventListener('dragover', drag_over, false);
dropMask.addEventListener('dragleave', drag_leave, false);
dropMask.addEventListener('drop', drag_drop, false);
In a few words, you create a "mask" inside the dropzone, with width & height inherited, position absolute, that will just show when the dragover starts.
So, after showing that mask, you can do the trick by attaching the others dragleave & drop events on it.
After leaving or dropping, you just hide the mask again.
Simple and without complications.
(Obs.: Greg Pettit advice -- You must be sure that the mask hover the entire box, including the border)
This fairly simple solution is working for me so far, assuming your event is attached to each drag element individually.
if (evt.currentTarget.contains(evt.relatedTarget)) {
return;
}
The "right" way to solve this issue is to disable pointer events on child elements of the drop target (as in #H.D.'s answer). Here's a jsFiddle I created which demonstrates this technique. Unfortunately, this doesn't work in versions of Internet Explorer prior to IE11, since they didn't support pointer events.
Luckily, I was able to come up with a workaround which does work in old versions of IE. Basically, it involves identifying and ignoring dragleave events which occur when dragging over child elements. Because the dragenter event is fired on child nodes before the dragleave event on the parent, separate event listeners can be added to each child node which add or remove an "ignore-drag-leave" class from the drop target. Then the drop target's dragleave event listener can simply ignore calls which occur when this class exists. Here's a jsFiddle demonstrating this workaround. It is tested and working in Chrome, Firefox, and IE8+.
Update:
I created a jsFiddle demonstrating a combined solution using feature detection, where pointer events are used if supported (currently Chrome, Firefox, and IE11), and the browser falls back to adding events to child nodes if pointer event support isn't available (IE8-10).
if you are using HTML5, you can get the parent's clientRect:
let rect = document.getElementById("drag").getBoundingClientRect();
Then in the parent.dragleave():
dragleave(e) {
if(e.clientY < rect.top || e.clientY >= rect.bottom || e.clientX < rect.left || e.clientX >= rect.right) {
//real leave
}
}
here is a jsfiddle
A very simple solution is to use the pointer-events CSS property. Just set its value to none upon dragstart on every child element. These elements won't trigger mouse-related events anymore, so they won't catch the mouse over them and thus won't trigger the dragleave on the parent.
Don't forget to set this property back to auto when finishing the drag ;)
A simple solution is to add the css rule pointer-events: none to the child component to prevent the trigger of ondragleave. See example:
function enter(event) {
document.querySelector('div').style.border = '1px dashed blue';
}
function leave(event) {
document.querySelector('div').style.border = '';
}
div {
border: 1px dashed silver;
padding: 16px;
margin: 8px;
}
article {
border: 1px solid silver;
padding: 8px;
margin: 8px;
}
p {
pointer-events: none;
background: whitesmoke;
}
<article draggable="true">drag me</article>
<div ondragenter="enter(event)" ondragleave="leave(event)">
drop here
<p>child not triggering dragleave</p>
</div>
The problem is that the dragleave event is being fired when the mouse goes in front of the child element.
I've tried various methods of checking to see if the e.target element is the same as the this element, but couldn't get any improvement.
The way I fixed this problem was a bit of a hack, but works 100%.
dragleave: function(e) {
// Get the location on screen of the element.
var rect = this.getBoundingClientRect();
// Check the mouseEvent coordinates are outside of the rectangle
if(e.x > rect.left + rect.width || e.x < rect.left
|| e.y > rect.top + rect.height || e.y < rect.top) {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
}
Very simple solution:
parent.addEventListener('dragleave', function(evt) {
if (!parent.contains(evt.relatedTarget)) {
// Here it is only dragleave on the parent
}
}
I was having the same issue and tried to use pk7s solution. It worked but it could be done a little bit better without any extra dom elements.
Basicly the idea is same - add an extra unvisible overlay over droppable area. Only lets do this without any extra dom elements. Here is the part were CSS pseudo-elements come to play.
Javascript
var dragOver = function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
this.classList.add('overlay');
};
var dragLeave = function (e) {
this.classList.remove('overlay');
};
var dragDrop = function (e) {
this.classList.remove('overlay');
window.alert('Dropped');
};
var dropArea = document.getElementById('box');
dropArea.addEventListener('dragover', dragOver, false);
dropArea.addEventListener('dragleave', dragLeave, false);
dropArea.addEventListener('drop', dragDrop, false);
CSS
This after rule will create a fully covered overlay for droppable area.
#box.overlay:after {
content:'';
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
bottom: 0;
right: 0;
z-index: 1;
}
Here is the full solution: http://jsfiddle.net/F6GDq/8/
I hope it helps anyone with the same problem.
You can fix it in Firefox with a little inspiration from the jQuery source code:
dragleave: function(e) {
var related = e.relatedTarget,
inside = false;
if (related !== this) {
if (related) {
inside = jQuery.contains(this, related);
}
if (!inside) {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
}
}
Unfortunately it doesn't work in Chrome because relatedTarget appears not to exist on dragleave events, and I assume you're working in Chrome because your example did't work in Firefox. Here's a version with the above code implemented.
And here it goes, a solution for Chrome:
.bind('dragleave', function(event) {
var rect = this.getBoundingClientRect();
var getXY = function getCursorPosition(event) {
var x, y;
if (typeof event.clientX === 'undefined') {
// try touch screen
x = event.pageX + document.documentElement.scrollLeft;
y = event.pageY + document.documentElement.scrollTop;
} else {
x = event.clientX + document.body.scrollLeft + document.documentElement.scrollLeft;
y = event.clientY + document.body.scrollTop + document.documentElement.scrollTop;
}
return { x: x, y : y };
};
var e = getXY(event.originalEvent);
// Check the mouseEvent coordinates are outside of the rectangle
if (e.x > rect.left + rect.width - 1 || e.x < rect.left || e.y > rect.top + rect.height - 1 || e.y < rect.top) {
console.log('Drag is really out of area!');
}
})
Here's another solution using document.elementFromPoint:
dragleave: function(event) {
var event = event.originalEvent || event;
var newElement = document.elementFromPoint(event.pageX, event.pageY);
if (!this.contains(newElement)) {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
}
Hope this works, here's a fiddle.
An alternate working solution, a little simpler.
//Note: Due to a bug with Chrome the 'dragleave' event is fired when hovering the dropzone, then
// we must check the mouse coordinates to be sure that the event was fired only when
// leaving the window.
//Facts:
// - [Firefox/IE] e.originalEvent.clientX < 0 when the mouse is outside the window
// - [Firefox/IE] e.originalEvent.clientY < 0 when the mouse is outside the window
// - [Chrome/Opera] e.originalEvent.clientX == 0 when the mouse is outside the window
// - [Chrome/Opera] e.originalEvent.clientY == 0 when the mouse is outside the window
// - [Opera(12.14)] e.originalEvent.clientX and e.originalEvent.clientY never get
// zeroed if the mouse leaves the windows too quickly.
if (e.originalEvent.clientX <= 0 || e.originalEvent.clientY <= 0) {
I know this is a old question but wanted to add my preference. I deal with this by adding class triggered css :after element at a higher z-index then your content. This will filter out all the garbage.
.droppable{
position: relative;
z-index: 500;
}
.droppable.drag-over:after{
content: "";
display:block;
position:absolute;
left:0;
right:0;
top:0;
bottom:0;
z-index: 600;
}
Then just add the drag-over class on your first dragenter event and none of the child elements trigger the event any longer.
dragEnter(event){
dropElement.classList.add('drag-over');
}
dragLeave(event){
dropElement.classList.remove('drag-over');
}
Not sure if this cross browser, but I tested in Chrome and it solves my problem:
I want to drag and drop a file over entire page, but my dragleave is fired when i drag over child element. My fix was to look at the x and y of mouse:
i have a div that overlays my entire page, when the page loads i hide it.
when you drag over document i show it, and when you drop on the parent it handles it, and when you leave the parent i check x and y.
$('#draganddrop-wrapper').hide();
$(document).bind('dragenter', function(event) {
$('#draganddrop-wrapper').fadeIn(500);
return false;
});
$("#draganddrop-wrapper").bind('dragover', function(event) {
return false;
}).bind('dragleave', function(event) {
if( window.event.pageX == 0 || window.event.pageY == 0 ) {
$(this).fadeOut(500);
return false;
}
}).bind('drop', function(event) {
handleDrop(event);
$(this).fadeOut(500);
return false;
});
I've stumbled into the same problem and here's my solution - which I think is much easier then above. I'm not sure if it's crossbrowser (might depend on even bubbling order)
I'll use jQuery for simplicity, but solution should be framework independent.
The event bubbles to parent either way so given:
<div class="parent">Parent <span>Child</span></div>
We attach events
el = $('.parent')
setHover = function(){ el.addClass('hovered') }
onEnter = function(){ setTimeout(setHover, 1) }
onLeave = function(){ el.removeClass('hovered') }
$('.parent').bind('dragenter', onEnter).bind('dragleave', onLeave)
And that's about it. :) it works because even though onEnter on child fires before onLeave on parent, we delay it slightly reversing the order, so class is removed first then reaplied after a milisecond.
I've written a little library called Dragster to handle this exact issue, works everywhere except silently doing nothing in IE (which doesn't support DOM Event Constructors, but it'd be pretty easy to write something similar using jQuery's custom events)
Just check if the dragged over element is a child, if it is, then don't remove your 'dragover' style class. Pretty simple and works for me:
$yourElement.on('dragleave dragend drop', function(e) {
if(!$yourElement.has(e.target).length){
$yourElement.removeClass('is-dragover');
}
})
I wrote a drag-and-drop module called drip-drop that fixes this weirdo behavior, among others. If you're looking for a good low-level drag-and-drop module you can use as the basis for anything (file upload, in-app drag-and-drop, dragging from or to external sources), you should check this module out:
https://github.com/fresheneesz/drip-drop
This is how you would do what you're trying to do in drip-drop:
$('#drop').each(function(node) {
dripDrop.drop(node, {
enter: function() {
$(node).addClass('red')
},
leave: function() {
$(node).removeClass('red')
}
})
})
$('#drag').each(function(node) {
dripDrop.drag(node, {
start: function(setData) {
setData("text", "test") // if you're gonna do text, just do 'text' so its compatible with IE's awful and restrictive API
return "copy"
},
leave: function() {
$(node).removeClass('red')
}
})
})
To do this without a library, the counter technique is what I used in drip-drop, tho the highest rated answer misses important steps that will cause things to break for everything except the first drop. Here's how to do it properly:
var counter = 0;
$('#drop').bind({
dragenter: function(ev) {
ev.preventDefault()
counter++
if(counter === 1) {
$(this).addClass('red')
}
},
dragleave: function() {
counter--
if (counter === 0) {
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
},
drop: function() {
counter = 0 // reset because a dragleave won't happen in this case
}
});
I found a simple solution to this problem so sharing it. It works well in my case.
jsfiddle try it.
You can actually achieve this only via the dragenter event and you don't even need to register a dragleave. All you need is to have a no-drop area around your dropzones and that's it.
You can also have nested dropzones and this works perfectly. Check this as well nested dropzones.
$('.dropzone').on("dragenter", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
$(this).addClass("over");
$(".over").not(this).removeClass("over"); // in case of multiple dropzones
});
$('.dropzone-leave').on("dragenter", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
$(".over").removeClass("over");
});
// UPDATE
// As mar10 pointed out, the "Esc" key needs to be managed,
// the easiest approach is to detect the key and clean things up.
$(document).on('keyup', function(e){
if (e.key === "Escape") {
$(".over").removeClass("over");
}
});
After spending so many hours I got that suggestion working exactly as intended. I wanted to provide a cue only when files were dragged over, and document dragover, dragleave was causing painful flickers on Chrome browser.
This is how I solved it, also throwing in proper cues for user.
$(document).on('dragstart dragenter dragover', function(event) {
// Only file drag-n-drops allowed, http://jsfiddle.net/guYWx/16/
if ($.inArray('Files', event.originalEvent.dataTransfer.types) > -1) {
// Needed to allow effectAllowed, dropEffect to take effect
event.stopPropagation();
// Needed to allow effectAllowed, dropEffect to take effect
event.preventDefault();
$('.dropzone').addClass('dropzone-hilight').show(); // Hilight the drop zone
dropZoneVisible= true;
// http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/dnd/basics/
// http://api.jquery.com/category/events/event-object/
event.originalEvent.dataTransfer.effectAllowed= 'none';
event.originalEvent.dataTransfer.dropEffect= 'none';
// .dropzone .message
if($(event.target).hasClass('dropzone') || $(event.target).hasClass('message')) {
event.originalEvent.dataTransfer.effectAllowed= 'copyMove';
event.originalEvent.dataTransfer.dropEffect= 'move';
}
}
}).on('drop dragleave dragend', function (event) {
dropZoneVisible= false;
clearTimeout(dropZoneTimer);
dropZoneTimer= setTimeout( function(){
if( !dropZoneVisible ) {
$('.dropzone').hide().removeClass('dropzone-hilight');
}
}, dropZoneHideDelay); // dropZoneHideDelay= 70, but anything above 50 is better
});
"dragleave" event is fired when mouse pointer exits the dragging area of the target container.
Which makes a lot of sense as in many cases only the parent may be droppable and not the descendants.
I think event.stopPropogation() should have handled this case but seems like it doesn't do the trick.
Above mentioned some solutions do seem to work for most of the cases, but fails in case of those children which does not support dragenter / dragleave events, such as iframe.
1 workaround is to check the event.relatedTarget and verify if it resides inside the container then ignore the dragleave event as I have done here:
function isAncestor(node, target) {
if (node === target) return false;
while(node.parentNode) {
if (node.parentNode === target)
return true;
node=node.parentNode;
}
return false;
}
var container = document.getElementById("dropbox");
container.addEventListener("dragenter", function() {
container.classList.add("dragging");
});
container.addEventListener("dragleave", function(e) {
if (!isAncestor(e.relatedTarget, container))
container.classList.remove("dragging");
});
You can find a working fiddle here!
Solved ..!
Declare any array for ex:
targetCollection : any[]
dragenter: function(e) {
this.targetCollection.push(e.target); // For each dragEnter we are adding the target to targetCollection
$(this).addClass('red');
},
dragleave: function() {
this.targetCollection.pop(); // For every dragLeave we will pop the previous target from targetCollection
if(this.targetCollection.length == 0) // When the collection will get empty we will remove class red
$(this).removeClass('red');
}
No need to worry about child elements.
You can use a timeout with a transitioning flag and listen on the top element. dragenter / dragleave from child events will bubble up to the container.
Since dragenter on the child element fires before dragleave of the container, we will set the flag show as transitioning for 1ms... the dragleave listener will check for the flag before the 1ms is up.
The flag will be true only during transitions to child elements, and will not be true when transitioning to a parent element (of the container)
var $el = $('#drop-container'),
transitioning = false;
$el.on('dragenter', function(e) {
// temporarily set the transitioning flag for 1 ms
transitioning = true;
setTimeout(function() {
transitioning = false;
}, 1);
$el.toggleClass('dragging', true);
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
});
// dragleave fires immediately after dragenter, before 1ms timeout
$el.on('dragleave', function(e) {
// check for transitioning flag to determine if were transitioning to a child element
// if not transitioning, we are leaving the container element
if (transitioning === false) {
$el.toggleClass('dragging', false);
}
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
});
// to allow drop event listener to work
$el.on('dragover', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
});
$el.on('drop', function(e) {
alert("drop!");
});
jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/ilovett/U7mJj/
I had a similar problem — my code for hiding the dropzone on dragleave event for body was fired contatantly when hovering child elements making the dropzone flicker in Google Chrome.
I was able to solve this by scheduling the function for hiding dropzone instead of calling it right away. Then, if another dragover or dragleave is fired, the scheduled function call is cancelled.
body.addEventListener('dragover', function() {
clearTimeout(body_dragleave_timeout);
show_dropzone();
}, false);
body.addEventListener('dragleave', function() {
clearTimeout(body_dragleave_timeout);
body_dragleave_timeout = setTimeout(show_upload_form, 100);
}, false);
dropzone.addEventListener('dragover', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
dropzone.addClass("hover");
}, false);
dropzone.addEventListener('dragleave', function(event) {
dropzone.removeClass("hover");
}, false);
I struggeled a LOT with this, even after reading through all of these answers, and thought I may share my solution with you, because I figured it may be one of the simpler approaches, somewhat different though. My thought was of simply omitting the dragleave event listener completely, and coding the dragleave behaviour with each new dragenter event fired, while making sure that dragenter events won't be fired unnecessarily.
In my example below, I have a table, where I want to be able to exchange table row contents with each other via drag & drop API. On dragenter, a CSS class shall be added to the row element into which you're currently dragging your element, to highlight it, and on dragleave, this class shall be removed.
Example:
Very basic HTML table:
<table>
<tr>
<td draggable="true" class="table-cell">Hello</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td draggable="true" clas="table-cell">There</td>
</tr>
</table>
And the dragenter event handler function, added onto each table cell (aside dragstart, dragover, drop, and dragend handlers, which are not specific to this question, so not copied here):
/*##############################################################################
## Dragenter Handler ##
##############################################################################*/
// When dragging over the text node of a table cell (the text in a table cell),
// while previously being over the table cell element, the dragleave event gets
// fired, which stops the highlighting of the currently dragged cell. To avoid
// this problem and any coding around to fight it, everything has been
// programmed with the dragenter event handler only; no more dragleave needed
// For the dragenter event, e.target corresponds to the element into which the
// drag enters. This fact has been used to program the code as follows:
var previousRow = null;
function handleDragEnter(e) {
// Assure that dragenter code is only executed when entering an element (and
// for example not when entering a text node)
if (e.target.nodeType === 1) {
// Get the currently entered row
let currentRow = this.closest('tr');
// Check if the currently entered row is different from the row entered via
// the last drag
if (previousRow !== null) {
if (currentRow !== previousRow) {
// If so, remove the class responsible for highlighting it via CSS from
// it
previousRow.className = "";
}
}
// Each time an HTML element is entered, add the class responsible for
// highlighting it via CSS onto its containing row (or onto itself, if row)
currentRow.className = "ready-for-drop";
// To know which row has been the last one entered when this function will
// be called again, assign the previousRow variable of the global scope onto
// the currentRow from this function run
previousRow = currentRow;
}
}
Very basic comments left in code, such that this code suits for beginners too. Hope this will help you out! Note that you will of course need to add all the event listeners I mentioned above onto each table cell for this to work.
Here is another approach based on the timing of events.
The dragenter event dispatched from the child element can be captured by the parent element and it always occurs before the dragleave. The timing between these two events is really short, shorter than any possible human mouse action. So, the idea is to memorize the time when a dragenter happens and filter dragleave events that occurs "not too quickly" after ...
This short example works on Chrome and Firefox:
var node = document.getElementById('someNodeId'),
on = function(elem, evt, fn) { elem.addEventListener(evt, fn, false) },
time = 0;
on(node, 'dragenter', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
time = (new Date).getTime();
// Drag start
})
on(node, 'dragleave', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
if ((new Date).getTime() - time > 5) {
// Drag end
}
})

Implementing a Parameter to a plugin - Shows 'X' number of elements

The current plugin, shown below, scrolls the top-most div in a series of divs with the same class upwards, then removes it from the container, and appends it to the bottom of the series (within the container). This gives the illusion of a vertical slideshow.
$.fn.rotateEach = function ( opts ) {
var $this = this,
defaults = {
delay: 5000
},
settings = $.extend(defaults, opts),
rotator = function ($elems) {
$elems.eq(0).slideUp(500, function(){
var $eq0 = $elems.eq(0).detach();
$elems.parent().append($eq0);
$eq0.fadeIn();
setTimeout(function(){ rotator( $($elems.selector) ); },
settings.delay);
});
};
setTimeout(function(){ rotator( $this ); }, settings.delay);
};
$('.dynPanelContent').rotateEach();
However, if there are a large number of elements to scroll through, this would make for a VERY long page. As such, I am attempting to re-write this script so that it accepts a parameter which will determine how many elements to display. Any elements exceeding this number will be hidden until they are in the top 'x' number of elements. Here is an example of what I have attempted to implement.
$.fn.rotateEach = function (opts) {
var $this = this,
defaults = {
delay: 5000,
//Add a parameter named elementsShown, pass in a default value of 3
elementsShown: 3
},
settings = $.extend(defaults, opts),
rotator = function ($elems) {
//Hide the elements that are past the number to be shown
for (i = settings.elementsShown; i <= $elems.eq; i++) {
$elems.eq(i).hide();
}
$elems.eq(0).slideUp(500, function () {
var $eq0 = $elems.eq(0).detach();
var $eqN = $elems.eq(settings.elementsShown) - 1;
//Check & Show the element that is now within the show range
if ($elems.eq() == $eqN) {
$elems.eq($eqN).show('slow');
}
$elems.parent().append($eq0);
$eq0.fadeIn();
setTimeout(function () { rotator($($elems.selector)); },
settings.delay);
});
};
You can use simple CSS for this, mate.
If your elements are all of the same height (which your problem has to assume: if you are rotating a whole bunch of things dynamically, you won't want your page to change height), then you don't really need to use JavaScript for this at all. Just set the height of the container to what you want and hide the overflow. Then when you remove and append, everything appears to work. This won't take care of your dynamic configuration, though.
Improved plug-in: http://jsfiddle.net/morrison/tTJaM/
Notes:
Added support for showing X elements.
Added support for rotating only certain elements.
Added support for stopping the rotations:
Stop after X milliseconds.
Stop after X rotations.
overflow-y:hidden is added to container dynamically.
Simplified your detaching/attaching.
Known Issues:
Displaying X elements doesn't check for a maximum.

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