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I have an image, located within a div element, and this div element changes some of its style properties when the mouse passes over it, using the CSS :hover pseudo-class. This works fine in all browsers. But the div element also has another class, :active, which is supposed to change its background color when clicked.

Here is when things start to break. In IE9 (the version i have installed), when I click on the image, the background color of the div doesn't change. Only when I click elsewhere on the div, it works, the color changes. In Firefox, it doesn't matter where I click within the div element, the background color changes, even if I click on the image. This is how I want IE to behave too, so when the usem clicks on the div, no matter where inside it, the :active effect would be triggered.

Is there a workaround or something I can use to make it work for IE?

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    Need to see actual code. Maybe put up a demo at jsfiddle.net.
    – BoltClock
    Jun 20, 2011 at 12:38
  • The description is quite clear... Here's a jsfiddle reproducing the issue. Issue is there in IE8 too.
    – Kraz
    Jun 20, 2011 at 14:05
  • i thought :active psuedo-class can only be used with anchor tag
    – Kasturi
    Jun 20, 2011 at 14:36

2 Answers 2

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After a bit of toying around with the css on the jsFiddle, I didn't find any CSS way to solve this : IE just doesn't want to consider the img as a part of the div.

I'd suggest you to solve this in javascript. Using onMouseDown.

pseudo :

(div or img).onMouseDown(div.addClass:"active")
(div or img).onMouseUp(div.removeClass : "active").

I'd suggest using a js framework to make it easier. See jquery mouseup and mousedown.

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  • Thanks Kraz, i'll give it try. But I anticipate bad things ahead :) Fixing a problem in one technology with another technology seems a little scary to me. Like putting a nail on the wall with a shoe :) Pitty that IE9, with all its super hi-tech, still has quircks carried from older versions. But thanks anyways buddy :)
    – Avi Shilon
    Jun 20, 2011 at 14:44
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    Look at this jsFiddle. When you click on the image (click run if it doesn't appear), in IE, it becomes pink. In FF, it goes teal. When you click on an image in firefox, the div and the image become active. In IE, only the image become active. Since you can't select a parent node in CSS only, you gotta use JavaScript (or change your design, or abandon IE support).
    – Kraz
    Jun 20, 2011 at 15:13
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There's a trickier work around to this issue.

You can put up another div on top of the image as an overlay and make that div to respond to clicks and mouse actions and using jQuery add effects to the div underneath the image

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