187

So after reading a recently answered question i am unclear if i really understand the difference between the mouseenter() and mouseover(). The post states

MouseOver():

Will fire upon entering an element and whenever any mouse movements occur within the element.

MouseEnter():

Will fire upon entering an element.

I came up with a fiddle that uses both and they seem to be quite similar. Can someone please explain to me the difference between the two ?

I have also tried reading the JQuery definitions, both say the same thing.

The mouseover event is sent to an element when the mouse pointer enters the element

The mouseenter event is sent to an element when the mouse pointer enters the element.

Can someone please clarify with an example?

3

6 Answers 6

290

You see the behavior when your target element contains child elements:

http://jsfiddle.net/ZCWvJ/7/

Each time your mouse enters or leaves a child element, mouseover is triggered, but not mouseenter.

$('#my_div').bind("mouseover mouseenter", function(e) {
  var el = $("#" + e.type);
  var n = +el.text();
  el.text(++n);
});
#my_div {
  padding: 0 20px 20px 0;
  background-color: #eee;
  margin-bottom: 10px;
  width: 90px;
  overflow: hidden;
}

#my_div>div {
  float: left;
  margin: 20px 0 0 20px;
  height: 25px;
  width: 25px;
  background-color: #aaa;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.6.2/jquery.min.js"></script>

<div>MouseEnter: <span id="mouseenter">0</span></div>
<div>MouseOver: <span id="mouseover">0</span></div>

<div id="my_div">
  <div></div>
  <div></div>
  <div></div>
  <div></div>
</div>

6
  • 2
    @psychobrm - No. Play with these two demos that also track the mouseleave event: jsfiddle.net/ZCWvJ/232 jsfiddle.net/ZCWvJ/233 If over where the same as enter + leave, then the count for over would be the sum of the counts for enter and leave.
    – gilly3
    Aug 22, 2013 at 18:01
  • 1
    is there a specific reason to write var n = + el.text(); instead of var n = el.text();? I am asking just for curiosity. Aug 27, 2013 at 8:59
  • 3
    @FredrickGauss - I'm using the + operator to coerce the string returned from el.text() to a number. Did I need to? No. In this case, the next statement that uses n would also coerce it to a number. So, why did I use it? I'm not sure... this was 2 years ago. It's a good habit. It makes my intention explicit. Probably I originally had n + 1 before I saved, but decided to shrink my code by 2 chars and just use ++n. n + 1 would not coerce n to a number, but instead would coerce 1 to a string resulting in output of, eg 0111111.
    – gilly3
    Aug 27, 2013 at 23:25
  • 2
    @gilly3 - thanks for detailed explanation of your travel in the mind. Aug 29, 2013 at 14:41
  • 1
    @gilly3 Good summary, but a minor improvement: "or leaves a child element" should be "or leaves a child element, given that there's a gap between the child and the parent. your fiddle has a margin/padding, and thus it's true that whenever you leave the child element you get a mouseover event, but try it with no padding/margins, and you won't get this event.
    – Israel
    Jul 5, 2016 at 11:10
21

Though they operate the same way, however, the mouseenter event only triggers when the mouse pointer enters the selected element. The mouseover event is triggered if a mouse pointer enters any child elements as well.

3

See the example code and demo at the bottom of the jquery documentation page:

http://api.jquery.com/mouseenter/

... mouseover fires when the pointer moves into the child element as well, while mouseenter fires only when the pointer moves into the bound element.

3

The mouseenter event differs from mouseover in the way it handles event bubbling. The mouseenter event, only triggers its handler when the mouse enters the element it is bound to, not a descendant. Refer: https://api.jquery.com/mouseenter/

The mouseleave event differs from mouseout in the way it handles event bubbling. The mouseleave event, only triggers its handler when the mouse leaves the element it is bound to, not a descendant. Refer: https://api.jquery.com/mouseleave/

2

This example demonstrates the difference between the mousemove, mouseenter and mouseover events:

https://jsfiddle.net/z8g613yd/

HTML:

<div onmousemove="myMoveFunction()">
    <p>onmousemove: <br> <span id="demo">Mouse over me!</span></p>
</div>

<div onmouseenter="myEnterFunction()">
    <p>onmouseenter: <br> <span id="demo2">Mouse over me!</span></p>
</div>

<div onmouseover="myOverFunction()">
    <p>onmouseover: <br> <span id="demo3">Mouse over me!</span></p>
</div>

CSS:

div {
    width: 200px;
    height: 100px;
    border: 1px solid black;
    margin: 10px;
    float: left;
    padding: 30px;
    text-align: center;
    background-color: lightgray;
}

p {
    background-color: white;
    height: 50px;
}

p span {
    background-color: #86fcd4;
    padding: 0 20px;
}

JS:

var x = 0;
var y = 0;
var z = 0;

function myMoveFunction() {
    document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = z += 1;
}

function myEnterFunction() {
    document.getElementById("demo2").innerHTML = x += 1;
}

function myOverFunction() {
    document.getElementById("demo3").innerHTML = y += 1;
}
  • onmousemove : occurs every time the mouse pointer is moved over the div element.
  • onmouseenter : only occurs when the mouse pointer enters the div element.
  • onmouseover : occurs when the mouse pointer enters the div element, and its child elements (p and span).
1
2

Old question, but still no good up-to-date answer with insight imo.

As jQuery uses Javascript wording for events and handlers, but does its own undocumented, but different interpretation of those, let me first shed light on the difference from the pure Javascript viewpoint:

  • both event pairs
    • the mouse can “jump” from outside/outer elements to inner/innermost elements when moved faster than the browser samples its position
    • any enter/over gets a corresponding leave/out (possibly late/jumpy)
    • events go to the visible element below the pointer (invisible elements can’t be target)
  • mouseenter/mouseleave
    • does not bubble (event not useful for delegate handlers)
    • the event registration itself defines the area of observation and abstraction
    • works on the target area, like a park with a pond: the pond is considered part of the park
    • the event is emitted on the target/area whenever the element itself or any descendant directly is entered/left the first time
    • entering a descendant, moving from one descendant to another or moving back into the target does not finish/restart the mouseenter/mouseleave cycle (i.e. no events fire)
    • if you want to observe multiple areas with one handler, register it on each area/element or use the other event pair discussed next
    • descendants of registered areas/elements can have their own handlers, creating an independent observation area with its independent mouseenter/mouseleave event cycles
    • if you think about how a bubbling version of mouseenter/mouseleave could look like, you end up with with something like mouseover/mouseout
  • mouseover/mouseout
    • events bubble
    • events fire whenever the element below the pointer changes
      • mouseout on the previously sampled element
      • followed by mouseover on the new element
      • the events don’t “nest”: before e.g. a child is “overed” the parent will be “out”
    • target/relatedTarget indicate new and previous element
    • if you want to watch different areas
      • register one handler on a common parent (or multiple parents, which together cover all elements you want to watch)
      • look for the element you are interested in between the handler element and the target element; maybe $(event.target).closest(...) suits your needs

Not-so-trivial mouseover/mouseout example:

$('.side-menu, .top-widget')
  .on('mouseover mouseout', event => {
    const target = event.type === 'mouseover' ? event.target : event.relatedTarget;
    const thing = $(target).closest('[data-thing]').attr('data-thing') || 'default';
    // do something with `thing`
  });

These days, all browsers support mouseover/mouseout and mouseenter/mouseleave natively. Nevertheless, jQuery does not register your handler to mouseenter/mouseleave, but silently puts them on a wrappers around mouseover/mouseout as the code below exposes.

The emulation is unnecessary, imperfect and a waste of CPU cycles: it filters out mouseover/mouseout events that a mouseenter/mouseleave would not get, but the target is messed. The real mouseenter/mouseleave would give the handler element as target, the emulation might indicate children of that element, i.e. whatever the mouseover/mouseout carried.

For that reason I do not use jQuery for those events, but e.g.:

$el[0].addEventListener('mouseover', e => ...);

const list = document.getElementById('log');
const outer = document.getElementById('outer');
const $outer = $(outer);

function log(tag, event) {
  const li = list.insertBefore(document.createElement('li'), list.firstChild);
  // only jQuery handlers have originalEvent
  const e = event.originalEvent || event;
  li.append(`${tag} got ${e.type} on ${e.target.id}`);
}

outer.addEventListener('mouseenter', log.bind(null, 'JSmouseenter'));
$outer.on('mouseenter', log.bind(null, '$mouseenter'));
div {
  margin: 20px;
  border: solid black 2px;
}

#inner {
  min-height: 80px;
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<body>
  <div id=outer>
    <ul id=log>
    </ul>
  </div>
</body>


Note: For delegate handlers never use jQuery’s “delegate handlers with selector registration”. (Reason in another answer.) Use this (or similar):

$(parent).on("mouseover", e => {
  if ($(e.target).closest('.gold').length) {...};
});

instead of

$(parent).on("mouseover", '.gold', e => {...});

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.