How to disable URL tooltip (status bar)? - javascript

When I click on a link (or hover with a mouse), the URL shows up at the bottom of the screen. That's the default behaviour in Firefox.
How can I prevent this ?
I'm making a website for tactile interfaces.
Thanks !

It would be better if you are using any other tag other than <a> if suppose you are using a
<div id='idofdiv'> tag
the query will be
$('#idofdiv').click(function(){
window.open('www.google.com');
});
hope this helps!!

Browsers don`t show what object will do onClick, so try this:
<div onclick="location.href ='http://www.google.com';"> click me </div>
Or you can use span which is inline element:
<span onclick="location.href ='http://www.google.com';"> click me </span>

you can achieve this using jquery,
first inlcude the jquery library in your page then
write the script in the page
$(function(){
$('[data-url]') //select all elements having data-url
.click(function(e){ e.preventDefault();
window.location.href= $(this).attr('data-url')})
})
and in the html
<span data-url="#/inbox" >Go to inbox</span>
<a data-url="mydraft.html">Drafts</a>

This is not possible and CSS is nowhere here, you just cannot do it with CSS, well you can use something like this to spoof the <a> link but I suggest you don't use all this, without any specific reason, anyways they'll find the URL from the source page
Spoofing
Demo
Note: Actually just checked, the demo is not working on the fiddle page but just make a local .html page and it will work

Related

<a href> Anchor remains in URL and in page after refreshing

I have this little issue here with my page, where if I reload it while being anchored, the anchor remains and there is a problem to it. I.E
http://localhost/public/product/1#mod1
The anchor is #mod1, and while the anchor remains active after refresh, my CSS code is saying that this element:
.overlay:target
is active. Which is a very big issue, because then it doesn't allow me to explore the functionallity I have implemented on this anchor, unless I remove the #mod1 from the end of the page manually by hand. Because this CSS element makes this div visible when it should be not unless activated with the a href element.
(?)
<div id="mod{{$key}}" class="overlay">
content
</div>
Any ideas on how could I solve it? I tried catching whether the user has refreshed the page and redirecting him to an action/route/url, but the page stays blank then and URL unchanged.
You cannot use href with angularJS because it will misdirect the target link. AngularJS is a markup language for HTML, it is not HTML. Because angularJS is not HTML, we're provided a special set of directives to write angularJS values inline into HTML markup. The answer to solve your issue would be to replace the href tag in the anchor element with the angularJS directive ngHref. You can find more information about how to use ngHref and other directives at the link below. Good luck.
https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/directive/ngHref
Well I wanted to purely solve this without JS, but here's what I did, HTML:
<a ng-href="mod{{$key}}" class="button">(?)</a>
<div id="mod{{$key}}" class="overlay">
Then replaced the CSS of overlay:target to -> overlay:active, and implemented JS:
var curmod;
$('a.button').on('click', function(e)
{
curmod = document.getElementById($(this).attr('ng-href'));
$(curmod).addClass('active');
});
$('.popup a.close').on('click', function(e)
{
$(curmod).removeClass('active');
curmod = null;
});

Content popup box called by href

I use Wordpress and I would like to have a plugin that allow me to open a box/popup content for "a href" call.
Something like this:
Text use it in a div tag
this is the code i use:
<div class="tracklist download-button2" style="display: initial-block">
<a href="#">
<span class="header-clip2">
<span class="header-triangle2"></span>
</span>
<span class="header-bg2"></span>
<div class="clear"></div>
<div class="file-icon-inner2">
<i class="icon-download2"></i>Tracklist
</div>
</div>
please check http://af-sound.ro "Tracklist" button
so whoever will click on Tracklist, i would like to have a box popup opened with the content inside.
There will be more "tracklist" buttons, so i dont need just a global popup box. I have tried with Anything popup but that doesn't work as it use a shortcode like: [anythingpupup=id1] which cannot be used in "a href" call
The first issue here is that you are missing the closing anchor tag
Secondly, you should give the box which you'd like to open an "id" attribute.
<div id="popup-box"></div>
Wherever you place your anchor tag, you can then reference the box using
Click to open popup
The "#" will refer to the id attribute of the matched element.
There is no need to install an entire Wordpress plugin. You can use something like Bootstrap Modals
The instructions are very straight forward to help you set it up.
I think you don't need a plugin for that. You could use just javascript to open such popup from an anchor. Here is an example code:
Open Popup!
<script language="javascript">
function Popup()
{
var win = window.open('', '',"toolbar=no, width=100, height=20");
var doc = win.document.open();
doc.write('<html><body> <b>Hello!</b> </body></html>');
doc.close();
}
</script>
As you can see, you can add any dynamic html as content of the popup, including the html that you want in the doc.write method.
Cheers!
There are a number of ways of achieving this, depending on the result you want to get.
Maybe the simplest way is not using a plugin at all; just add a hidden div with the content of the popup in it. And then, from jQuery, capture the click of your tag a and show up that hidden div. From CSS you can style that div in any way you need.
If you want to use a plugin, you could use Fancybox or any other similar, given the fact that you already have jQuery on your website.

How to change the contents of a div with a link click?

Here is a (Modified) jsfiddle of my webpage. It has quite a bit more, and the positioning is correct, as opposed to this: http://jsfiddle.net/ry0tec3p/1/
About
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I'm trying to make the slightly transparent black area in the middle of the webpage (the "center" div.) change html when I click on one of the links above(which look like a few tabs on the webpage), and I want the tab to stay selected until another is clicked. It can't be just the text, because different tabs will have different HTML. Could somebody edit the jsfiddle, or show me how to, to make this happen?
EDIT:
I've tried using:
$(".btn1").click(function(){
$(".center").load( "file.html" );
});
which did nothing at all.
also, I have looked into inner HTML, but my attempts at implementing it into this have failed because I'm ignorant.
If you attempt to run this locally it you may find it will not work, you must have this on a live server. And on the same domain as the files you're calling for
This is jQuery so make sure you have a script tag linked to jQuery!
HTML
<button id="home" class="Navigation">Home</button>
<button id="about" class="Navigation">About Us</button>
<button id="contact" class="Navigation">Contact Us</button>
<div id="PageData">Data Will Display Here</div>
jQuery
$(document).ready(function(){ //All jQuery should go in this ready function
// Onclick function
$('.Navigation').click(function () {
// this.id = to the ID of the element being clicked
$('#PageData').load(this.id+".html");
});
});
All you need to do it work this into your existing source code.
You can apply the class="Navigation" to any element you want to use to fire the function but it will use the ID of that element to load the page.
Example a button with the id of cars will try load cars.html
I hope this helps. Happy coding! :)
WORKING DEMO!

How to implement go-to javascript links? (plus highlight)

Is there a standard way for making all the links in a site, with the form href=#something, become 'go-to' links? (does this kind of links have a name?)
Let me describe these links further: When you click them, #something is added to the url. And if you go directly to that url from your browser, it takes you to that page, and then it scrolls down to that link.
Take this link as example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe#cite_note-Craig-45
Edit: As you can see, the div gets highlighted. How to make that happen automatically?
You're referring to anchor tags. Here's an example of a JavaScript-less internal link:
Go to my div!
<div id="myDiv">
This is content
</div>
If you want to send someone to myDiv using JavaScript, then you could do it this way:
<span onclick="window.location.hash = '#myDiv'">Go to my div!</span>
<div id="myDiv">
This is content
</div>
Here's a jsFiddle that demonstrates both the HTML and JavaScript methods.
You can also use a similar method to allow the use to navigate to page and then scroll them to the appropriate element on the page. Simply add the hash (#) plus the ID of the element to the URL. For example:
Go to my page and then div!
Or, with JavaScript
Go to my page and then div!
Use the id attribute of the a tag. Place the following at the location you would like to link to:
<a id="example"></a>
You can then link to that using:
Go to example
If you want to link to a specific anchor on a different page, simply use the # character after the URL:
Go to different page example
Here's an example.
The thing after the # is called an anchor, and is defined using the a-tag: <a id="something">.
If you just have #something as a link, like <a href="#something">, it will resolve relatively to the current page. So if your page is at http://myurl/mypage.html then it will open http://myurl/mypage.html#something.

Unobtrusive Javascript: Removing links if Javascript is enabled

I'm using PopBox for magnifying thumbnails on my page.
But I want my website to work even for users which turned javascript off.
I tried to use the following HTML code:
<a href="image.jpg">
<img src="thumbnail.jpg" pbsrc="image.jpg" onclick="Pop(...);"/>
</a>
Now i need to disable the a-Tag using javascript, otherwise my PopBox won't work.
How do I do that?
Just put the onclick on the a-tag:
<img ...>
Make sure to return false either at the end of the function (here Pop) or inline like in the above example. This prevents the user from being redirected to the link by the <a>'s default behaviour.
Put the onclick event onto the link itself, and return false from the handler if you don't want the default behavior to be executed (the link to be followed)
You could give all your fallback anchor tags a particular classname, like "simple"
Using prototype, you can get an array of all tags using that class using a CSS selector, e.g.
var anchors=$$('a.simple')
Now you can iterate over that array and clear the href attributes, or install an onclick handler to override the normal behaviour, etc...
(Edited to add that the other methods listed above are much simpler, this just came from a background of doing lots of unobtrusive javascript, where your JS kicks in and goes and augments a functioning HTML page with extra stuff!)
May I suggest, in my opinion, the best solution? This is using jQuery 1.4+.
Here you have a container with all your photos. Notice the added classes.
<div id="photo-container">
<a href="image1.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail1.jpg" pbsrc="image1.jpg" />
</a>
<a href="image2.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail2.jpg" pbsrc="image2.jpg" />
</a>
<a href="image3.jpg">
<img class="popup-image" src="thumbnail3.jpg" pbsrc="image3.jpg"/>
</a>
</div>
An then you make a single event handler this way:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
var container = $('#photo-container');
// let's bind our event handler
container.bind('click', function(event){
// thus we find (if any) the image the user has clicked on
var target = $(event.target).closest('img.popup-image');
// If the user has not hit any image, we do not handle the click
if (!target.length) return;
event.preventDefault(); // instead of return false;
// And here you can do what you want to your image
// which you can get from target
Pop(target.get(0));
});
});
</script>
The href attribute is not required for anchors (<a> tags), so get rid of it...
<a id="apic001" href="pic001.png"><img src="tn_pic001.png"></a>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.getElementById("apic001").removeAttribute("href");
</script>
This method will avoid library contention for onclick.
Tested in IE6/FF3/Chrome. Side benefit: You can link directly to the portion of the page containing that thumbnail, using the id as a URI fragment: http://whatever/gallery.html#apic001.
For maximum browser compatibility, add a name="apic001" attribute to the anchor tag in your markup ('name' and 'id' values must be identical).
Using jQuery, dojo, Prototype, etc. you should be able to do the removeAttribute on multiple, similar anchors without needing the id.
You should be able to mix and match the return false from Chris's idea with your own code:
<a href="image.jpg" onclick="return false;">
<img src="thumbnail.jpg" pbsrc="image.jpg" onclick="Pop(...);">
</a>
If someone has Javascript disabled, then their browser ignores the onclick statement in both elements and follows the link; if they have Javascript enabled, then their browser follows both OnClick statements -- the first one tells them not to follow the <a> link. ^_^

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