26

I've got the following list item:

<li>
    <input value="someRadioButton" name="ctl00$mainContent$group" type="radio"
        id="ctl00_mainContent_somelRadioButton" onclick="showSomeInfo()" />
    <label for="ctl00_mainContent_someRadioButton">
        <img class="extraPadding-Right-10" src="https://xxy.com/some_mark_37x23.gif" />
    </label>
</li>

So what shows up is a radio button and an image next to it. When I am in FireFox, Chrome, and Safari clicking on that image fires the showSomeInfo() that's specified in the radio's onclick. I'm not sure why I guess because it's wrapped in a label and that label is relating to that radio button....

But anyway that's not my problem. I like that when you click the image, that javascript method showSomeInfo() is called. But the problem is that it works in all browsers except IE 8. If I open this page in IE 8, clicking on the image does nothing and I'm not sure why. I'm baffled at this one.

9 Answers 9

17

I was looking for an answer to this and wrote a quick dirty jquery handler for it:

$("label").click(function(){
    if ($(this).attr("for") != "")
        $("#" + $(this).attr("for")).click();
});
7
  • The focus event should be used, not click. Also, I'm pretty sure this.for would work, so you don't have to create new jQuery objects
    – Yi Jiang
    Sep 27, 2010 at 5:04
  • Focus event doesn't fire oddly enough, so I had to use click. this.for doesn't work, it is a reserved word: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/…. You can use this.getAttribute('for')
    – Drew
    Aug 14, 2012 at 19:26
  • using javascript: if(this.htmlFor)
    – A. Wolff
    Nov 29, 2013 at 10:06
  • 2
    becareful: this might destory chrome and firefox functionality Mar 27, 2015 at 14:12
  • 2
    In chrome and firefox, if you have click events, they will fire twice.
    – Evan
    Sep 16, 2015 at 21:51
14

There's a slightly cleaner approach to change the markup that doesn't involve (ugly) CSS hacks or Javascript; change the <img> tag to a <span> tag with a background-image of the appropriate size. For example:

<li>
  <input value="someRadioButton" name="ctl00$mainContent$group" type="radio"
         id="ctl00_mainContent_somelRadioButton" onclick="showSomeInfo()" />
  <label for="ctl00_mainContent_someRadioButton">
    <span class="extraPadding-Right-10" style="background-image: url(https://xxy.com/some_mark_37x23.gif); width: 100px; height: 100px; display: inline-block" />
  </label>
</li>

Replacing the width and height of your image appropriately.

7

The reason it works the way it does in Firefox et al is that that's what <label> is supposed to do when it's got a "for" attribute that points to an input field (by "id" value). If it doesn't work that way in IE, it's because Microsoft either interpreted the standard differently or simply failed to implement it correctly. (I don't see any clear language in the w3c reference I found to stipulate whether anything but text content of a label should get focus and transfer it.)

7
  • I played around with it a but too. Can't get it to work with an image. Text is OK. Apr 20, 2010 at 19:53
  • This is not a constructive answer and provides no solutions to the problem. Jan 20, 2016 at 3:18
  • @Christopher it was an accurate answer in April of 2010. Internet Explorer was broken in various ways in its handling of <label> elements. Now it's 2016, and the world is a lot different of course. Also note that though you say the answer provides no solutions to the problem, the OP selected it as answering the question.
    – Pointy
    Jan 20, 2016 at 5:11
  • @Christopher Well I'd always prefer an actual solution, sometimes the right answer is, "It can't be done". Like if someone asks, "How can I build a perpetual motion machine?", I wouldn't say that anyone who replies "it's impossible" is being non-responsive!
    – Jay
    Oct 7, 2020 at 15:53
  • Reality is more complicated than this. I'm having exactly the same problem in an ASP.NET program. But when I create a simple HTML file, it works fine. This works: "<input id="chk21" name="chk21" type="checkbox" class="customcheck2" onclick="alert('click');" /><label for="chk21"><img src="icon-dark-20-plus.png"/><img src="icon-dark-20-plusdown.png"/></label>" Ok, that's in IE11, so maybe something has changed since this thread was originally posted.
    – Jay
    Oct 7, 2020 at 15:55
7

I've also discovered that if you have a hidden input with display:none or visibility:hidden and are relying on the label for selection it will not work in ie8.

My workaround was to have an overflow:hidden on the containing element and position the input outside of this area.

2
  • 1
    This little observation just turned my morning around. Thanks for reporting. Dec 1, 2014 at 17:43
  • This should be the best answer! Thanks! Aug 16, 2015 at 7:55
3

I Guess I have a better hack solution for this problem. I will explain why for first.

Using jquery to hit the label click works, but not when you are using an Input File, because you will receive access denied.

Using css and display the image as a background it´s not good too because you need to have an image with the exactly size, which is not the case when the user uploads the Image or you have a lot of images with different sizes.

Ok now I´ll explain the idea of the hack:

You have a Label with an image inside, when you click the image, IE8 doesn´t fire the Label. But if you write some text into the Label, when you click the text IE8 fire the label.

The Idea is to put a span inside the label, with the size of the label (width and height)

Ok but if you don´t have text inside it won´t work, but if you change the background color it will work.

So what you need to do is:

  1. Place a Span with the role size of the Label
  2. Write a background color and make it transparent
  3. Position the Span using relative position to put the Span exactly over the Label.

It´s a little hard to do it, but I guess it will cover many more situations. An example of a Label firing the Input type File:

<label for="" id="lblInput" style="cursor: pointer; z-index:3;">
    <img src="../Imagens/SemPerfil.jpg" ID="imgFoto" Style="max-width: 280px; max-height: 180px;z-index:2;" />
    <span style="position:relative;
        top:-180px;display:block;height:180px;width:280px;
        z-index:1;background-color:Aqua;
        -ms-filter:'progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=1)';
        background: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.0);" >
    </span>
</label>

I hope it works and save you Like it saved-me

1

Are you sure you aren't simply looking at a typo? Check "ctl00_mainContent_someRadioButton" vs. "ctl00_mainContent_somelRadioButton"

0

It looks like IE doesn't properly handle labels with img elements in them. The only reasonable ways I have been able to find for dealing with this problem are either using HTML component behaviors, Javascript handlers, or CSS hacks. I haven't tried all of these so I can't guarantee that they will work.

0

I tried some of the other solutions posted here and eventually amended them to get a working fix to your problem. My problem was similar, though the HTML looked a little different, with the LABEL tag wrapping both the image and the INPUT radio button.

The solution I include below will ensure that any onClick handlers fire correctly on the radio button itself. It also does this only once and not in browsers where the radio button label behaves normally.

This is the jQuery code I used to solve the problem in Internet Explorer 11:

$('LABEL > IMG').click(function () {
    var inputId = $(this).parents('LABEL:first').attr("for");
    if (inputId) $('#' + inputId).not(':checked').attr('checked', true).click();
});

The code above uses the jQuery method attr() to manipulate the checked property. If you're using jQuery 1.6 or higher you should modify this to use the jQuery method prop() instead.

0

This works for me with a group of radio inputs followed by labels containing an image. Basically used it instead of using for attribute in all browsers

      inputs.each(function() {

         $(this).click(function (e) {
             // do stuff ...
         });

        // adding click handler to label containing image 
        $(this).next().on('click', function(event) {
            // prevent 'for' attribute firing
            event.preventDefault();
            // check and trigger click on input
            $(this).prev().prop("checked", true).trigger('click');
        });
     });

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