5

Just wondering how I can get this working 100% correctly. I think I'm nearly there.

Basically, I have an image & when I mouseover, I want an overlay (which is a coloured div) to appear over the top.

I have this semi-working in this fiddle.

<img src="http://mirrorchecker.com/images/rod_160.png" width="160"
class="company-image"/>
<div class="company-image-overlay"></div>

/* CSS */
.company-image
{
}
.company-image-overlay
{
width: 160px;
height: 160px;
background-color: #ffb00f;
z-index: 1;
opacity: 0.5;
    position: fixed;
    top: 0.5em;
    display:none;
}

/* JQUERY */
$('.company-image').mouseover(function()
     {
        $('.company-image-overlay').show();
     });
$('.company-image').mouseout(function()
     {
       $('.company-image-overlay').hide();
     });

The issue seems to be when the overlay appears, the mouse is no longer technically over the .company-image therefore we get a constant cycling of over / out and the flashing background.

Any ideas?

2
  • Both good answers but I prefer David Thomas' one for readability & simplicity when I look at the code in 6 months time to figure it out :)
    – Paul Smith
    Mar 30, 2013 at 20:20
  • Choose an answer then.
    – jeremy
    Mar 30, 2013 at 20:38

3 Answers 3

6

The simplest solution is to add a wrapping element for both elements:

<div class="wrap">
    <img src="http://mirrorchecker.com/images/rod_160.png" width="160" class="company-image" />
    <div class="company-image-overlay"></div>
</div>

And place the mouseover/mouseout methods to that element instead:

$('.wrap').mouseover(function () {
    $('.company-image-overlay').show();
}).mouseout(function () {
    $('.company-image-overlay').hide();
});

JS Fiddle demo.

1
  • I know its too many days ago but i came across same requirement. I think we must set display to inline-block for that wrap class (moving mouse pointer right side of that image Still shows the overlay) except that its perfect Answer
    – Vivekh
    Feb 22, 2014 at 17:42
3

Instead of checking the .company-image element, you're going to want to check the overlay. Try the following.

$('.company-image').on("mouseover", function () {
    $('.company-image-overlay').show();
});

$('.company-image-overlay').on("mouseout", function () {
    $('.company-image-overlay').hide();
});
3

If i were you i would use only css. Actually you do not need any kind of functions like show() or hide(). I used an tag for wrapping because some old Internet Explorer versions does know about :hover only on this tag.

You can check the trick here

2
  • Ahh I see stefanz, so you're actually making the image opaque to let the background 'shine through' as it were. This is the kind of idea I had at first, but resorted to JQuery. Excellent. I would accept this as the correct answer but since I did ask about JQuery, I'll go with a JQuery example, but I originally (before I posted this question) was trying for an all CSS option.
    – Paul Smith
    Mar 31, 2013 at 8:02
  • +1 Great suggestion, with minimal JavaScript, and works better than the other solutions.
    – Matt
    Nov 10, 2014 at 22:09

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.