13

I am using the jquery-ui slider as a sideways scroll bar, and am having issues with the fact the handle slides beyond the end gutter (it can be seen here if you slide the slider the farthest to the right). I have tried everything I can think of with CSS to try to get the handle to go no further than the gutter, but to no avail. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

To clarify I am adding the following diagram which shows the problem (it is very subtle since the handle is small, however if you create a large handle in CSS, the handle goes exactly half its width beyond the gutter).

Here is a jsbin of the problem. Basically I want the handle to stay within the gutter.

alt text

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.0.min.js"></script>
<link href="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.4/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.0.min.js"></script>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.4/jquery-ui.min.js"></script>

  <style type="text/css">

  .demo {
     width: 800px;
     margin: 50px auto 0 auto;
  }



  .ui-slider-horizontal  {
    background: #DFEFFC none repeat scroll 0 0;
  }

  .ui-slider .ui-slider-handle {
    background-image:url(http://img207.imageshack.us/img207/7760/sliderhandle.png);
    cursor:default;
    height:15px;
    position: absolute;
    width:27px;
    z-index:2;   
    margin-left: -1px;
    margin-top: 3px;
  }

  .ui-slider 
  {
    position:relative;
    text-align:left;
  }


  </style>
  <script type="text/javascript">
  $(document).ready(function(){
    $("#slider").slider({
    slide: function( event, ui ) {      

            //normalise handle position between 0 and 1 relative to slider width
            var range = $("#slider").width();//width of slider
            var normalised = $("#slider1handle").position().left / range;

            //normalise between desired range: 0:HandleWidth
            var range2 = $("#slider1handle").width();
            normalised = (normalised*range2) + 1;      

            var marginAmount = -1*normalised;
            $("#slider1handle").css("margin-left", marginAmount);      
        }

    });
    $('a.ui-slider-handle').attr('id', "slider1handle");



  });
  </script>
</head>
<body>
<div class="demo">
  <div id="slider"></div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
5
  • 1
    Which browser? Which OS? Which jQuery version? The demo works just fine.
    – mcandre
    Aug 13, 2009 at 17:35
  • Firefox, IE, and Chrome on Windows. Drag the handle to the last pixel of the gutter, then you can drag it an extra few pixels. Replace the handle with a graphic of any size and it drags waay past the end of the gutter. Aug 13, 2009 at 21:21
  • I would raise this on the jquery ui google group and/or raise a ticket
    – redsquare
    Aug 14, 2009 at 8:37
  • Can't reproduce... FF 3.5.1 on Vista
    – Alex
    Aug 27, 2009 at 23:40
  • I don't know how to fix your JS Bin sample, but a note just in case someone can fix it: the slider scrollbar demo also resizes the handle to indicate how much there is to scroll, and thus also keeping a fixed scroll/pixel factor when moving the handle. It also responds to window resizing -- my screen is not big enough to check if the handle disappears when not needed. ;-) Is that something you fancy, or would you rather have a fixed size for the handle?
    – Arjan
    Aug 28, 2009 at 19:16

9 Answers 9

14
+150

the handle goes exactly its width beyond the gutter

More like exactly half its width, so it's not really moving past the end of the slider. When aligning your screenshots correctly, then you'll see the center of the handle is at the end of the slider, just like I expect it to be for a very precise setting. When the left is 0%, and the right is 100%, then the handle has to move past the end a bit to allow for choosing that 100%.

jQuery sliders with a line to indicate the end of the slider

This is the same when enlarging the handle. When in your case the handle moves more than half its width over the right edge, then I assume it extends less than half on the left? When playing with the CSS a bit I get the same effect with huge handles, like:

.ui-slider-horizontal .ui-state-default {
  /** Defaults: 
      margin-left: -0.6em;
      top: -0.3em;
  */
  width: 69px;
  height: 140px;
  margin-left: -39px;
  top: -68px;
}

Even better shown using an arrow, a bit of a hack:

.ui-slider-horizontal .ui-state-default {
  width: 40px;
  margin-left: -20px;
  top: 15px;
  background-color: white;
  background-image: url('https://i.stack.imgur.com/ObK9i.png');
  background-repeat: no-repeat;
  border: 0;
}

Slider with arrow to show gutter

However, as for your usage as a scrollbar, see the slider scrollbar demo, which seems to do what you want? Use a slider to manipulate the positioning of content on the page. In this case, it acts as a scrollbar with the potential to capture values if needed.

2
  • For me, @Jacob, the JS Bin at jsbin.com/umusa/17 still works (after 2.5 years...) What are you trying?
    – Arjan
    Mar 5, 2013 at 16:20
  • Hmmm, not providing any details in your question is not very useful, @Jacob.
    – Arjan
    Mar 6, 2013 at 17:26
3

If you add a cap to either end of the slider you can mimic the effect without changing anything about the slider itself.

<div class="cap left"></div>
(slider container here)
<div class="cap right"></div>

Just add some very basic CSS...

.cap {
    width: (half the handle width)
}
.ui-slider, .cap.left, .cap.right {
    float: left;
}
.ui-slider {
    width: (desired total gutter width - handle width);
}
.ui-slider-handle {
    margin-left: -(half the handle width);
}

...then style your caps accordingly.

For range shading on a single slider, just style the left cap with the range effect instead of the normal gutter.

1
  • This was awesome ... thanks I was trying something like this but my math was off. Works on all browsers too .. thanks again
    – James Daly
    Oct 23, 2012 at 18:54
1

I had the same problem and my solution is very simple i think. As Dr.Gibbs said draggable slider handle containment is set to 'parent' as default. So you can overcome it by using css...

consider handle img is 100px, and containment div is 250px wide. Than containment div should have width value 250 - 100 = 150px and margin-right:100px to have the maxZoom img to be shown on correct place. Than you have the exact limit for your handle image...

0

I found a solution. But first: I've had the same problem with single sliders and range sliders. Applying any CSS wouldnt work, nor did any Javascript-Fix-Approach.

SOLUTION for me was: The sliding area is 100% of the width of the scrollbar. So when your slider is 100px wide, and you set it to "50", the "margin-left" of the handle is 50%. When its 200px, set to 20, its 10% ... and so on.

I looked for that piece of code that calculated the leftmargin of the handle, reduced the with and added a standard leftmargin.

Open jquery-ui.js with the editor of your choice and goto line ~13170 and find function _refreshValue. You can also search for the first appearance of "valPercent" After line "valPercent = ....." i added the following:

valPercent = valPercent * 0.95 + 3.1;

This aliged my Handled perfectly inside the range and the gutter. Maybe you need to play around with the values to get your optimal setting depending on the ui-template you use, but at least this

Because I need any reputation to post images, here's a link to what i drew for you.

http://www.germanunique.com/slider.png

If you need help with this you can write me an email to [email protected] or leave a reply. This was my first Post on StackOveflow, I hope it helps those who have the same problem.

BYE !

0

For me works this:

var $Slide = jQuery('#StatusSlide');
$Slide.slider({
  slide: function(event, ui) {
    /* Fix handler to be inside of slider borders */
    var $Handle = $Slide.find('.ui-slider-handle');
    $Handle.css('margin-left', -1 * $Handle.width() * ($Slide.slider('value') / $Slide.slider('option', 'max')));
  }
});
/* Fix handler to be inside of slider borders */
var $Handle = $Slide.find('.ui-slider-handle');
$Handle.css('margin-left', -1 * $Handle.width() * ($Slide.slider('value') / $Slide.slider('option', 'max')));
0

The simple way I handled it was to make the slider track transparent and add a background layer that I could style separately.

HTML

<div class="slider-container">
  <div class="slider-background"></div>
  <div id="slider"></div>
</div>

CSS

.slider-container {
  position: relative;
}
.slider-background {
  position: absolute;
  top: 0;
  left: 10px;
  background: blue;
}
#slider {
  background: transparent;
}
0

i realize this is an old post, but i found a much simpler solution when i was confronted with this problem:

since the handle is purely a visual element, set the handle's margin-left to minus half the width of the handle. it will now properly center on the ends of the sliderail.

eg:

#slider-handle { width: 4rem; margin-left: -2rem; }
-1

Or you can do it with math, like this:

slide: function(event, ui) {
    $(ui.handle).html("<span class='ui-corner-all hover'>"+ui.value+"</span>");
    fix_slider(ui.handle,ui.value);
},
function fix_slider(slider,value) {
    var $.slider_decalatio = 0.35 // for an width of 27px
    var pos_calc = $.slider_decalation * value; // y = ax;
    $(slider).find('span').css("left",pos_calc + "px");
});

This can be improved but it's a quick fix.

-1

just add "padding-right" to the slider which is equal to the amount of the .ui-slider-handle class element.

#slider {
 height: 20px;
 width: 150px;
 background: #ccc;
 padding-right: 20px; (equal to the width of the handle below)
}
.ui-slider .ui-slider-handle {
  height: 20px;
  width: 20px;
  background: #333;
  display: block;
  position: relative;
}

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