3

First of all apologise in advance for my lack of understanding. I'm I noob when it comes to interactions.

My goal is to fade in or change the opacity one div when a link is pressed and fade out or change the opacity the remaining two.

Below is a visual reference:

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How might be the best way to do it with CSS or does it require Jquery? If the latter could you please point me in the direction of a tutorial?

1

3 Answers 3

4

You may use something like this:

HTML:

<a href="#tab1">Link1</a>
<a href="#tab2">Link2</a>
<a href="#tab3">Link3</a>
<div id="tabs">
    <div id="tab1"></div>
    <div id="tab2"></div>
    <div id="tab3"></div>
</div>

CSS:

#tabs > div {
    opacity: 0;
    transition: opacity 1s;
}
#tabs > div:target {
    opacity: 1;
}

Demo

Alternatively, instead of using hashes and :target you could use JavaScript to add an .active class.

5
1

Here is an example of how to do it with jQuery - http://jsfiddle.net/pgy69/

$('body').on('click', '.foo', function() {
    $(this).animate({ // the one that you clicked on
        opacity: 1 // animate its opacity to full
    }, 1000, function() { // do it in one second, then call a function
        $('.foo').not( $(this) ).animate({ // the ones you didn't click on
            opacity: 0.2 // animate their opacity to almost transparent
        }, 1000); // in one second
    });
});

The upshot of this function is that one animation, the fade in, completes before the fade out is started. You can make these occur simultaneously by rearranging the function some.

1

You could have for example...

HTML

<div id="links">
    <a>Link1</a>
    <a>Link2</a>
    <a>Link3</a>
</div>
<div id="tabs">
    <div>Tab1</div>
    <div>Tab2</div>
    <div>Tab3</div>
</div>

CSS

#tabs > div.blurred {
    opacity: 0.5; // set your value here
}
#tabs > div {
    opacity: 1;
    transition: opacity 1s;
}

Javascript (jQuery/Zepto)

$('#links > a').click(function(){
    // this will get the index of the link within it's parent
    var index = $(this).index();
    // blur everything
    $('#tabs>div').addClass('blurred');
    // but keep the tab on the same index within it's parent active
    $($('#tabs>div').get(index)).removeClass('blurred');
});

Alternative you could invert the logic from "blurred" to "active"

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