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Hi folks,

I have a CSS hover menu which works in all browsers except... surprise -- IE6!

#menu_right ul li:hover ul { visibility: visible; }

This ul is hidden initially, obviously. When I hover over its parent li, it should show up... but it doesn't.

To try to pinpoint the problem, I've tried making the ul initially visible and had the hover action take on something else. For example:

#menu_right ul li ul { visibility: visible; }

#menu_right ul li:hover ul { background: red; }

This doesn't help. On other browsers (including IE7+), the ul will turn red when I hover over its parent list element. But not in IE6. What am I missing?

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4 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

Take a look at whatever:hover http://www.xs4all.nl/~peterned/csshover.html. This baby solves all sorts of weird IE6 hover problems, might solve yours.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You should use something like this

<ul>
  <li><a href="#"></a></li>
  <li><a href="#"></a></li>
  <li><a href="#"></a></li>
</ul>

and style the <a> instead of the <li>. You just have to make sure that you size the a to be the exact same size as its enclosing li.

div.menu ul.menu {
    margin:0;
    padding:0;
}

div.menu ul li {
    margin:0;
    padding:0;
}

div.menu ul.menu a {
    display:block;
    height:22px;
    margin:0;
    overflow:hidden;
    padding:0;
    width:252px;
}

The reason you are seeing that it works on every browser except IE6, is that it supports :hover only on <a> elements.

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If it weren't for IE, I'd recommend getting rid of useless href="#" (<a> is legal without), but I seem to recall some IE versions only applying :hover on a[href] elements... – ephemient Sep 17 at 21:49
vote up 2 vote down

No :hover on anything but <a>... God I love this browser.

Try to use :hover on a conveniently-located <a> (if it's a list of links, like most CSS hover menus, it won't be a problem ), or just go with Javascript, as already suggested.

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vote up 1 vote down

IE6 doesn't know the CSS :hover pseudo-attribute, when it appears on anything than a link element. You will have to use JavaScript for this. Try conditional statements, and if you use jQuery, you can code the hover effect for IE6 in 3 (+/- formatting) lines:

<!--[if lt IE 7]>
<script type="text/javascript">
$('#menu_right ul li').hover (function () {
  $(this).addClass ("hover");
}, function () {
  $(this).removeClass ("hover");
});
</script>
<style type="text/css">
#menu_right ul li.hover {...}
...
</style>
<![endif]-->

Mark, that in the CSS statements I used the dot instead of the colon.

Cheers,

link|flag
Thanks for the quick response. But there infact IS an implementation of anything:hover on IE6, using purely CSS. I'm trying to avoid using all those javascript and broswer-specific hacks. cssplay.co.uk/menus/final_drop.html This guy's code plops everything inside a table if he encounters IE6. I'm not really sure why this works, but I've tested his demo on IE6 and it does. I've tried to mimic this but to no avail. – AngryDude Sep 17 at 21:16
2  
You could also use an <a> instead of an <li>; that no longer requires Javascript, though you'll have to jump through quite a few other loops trying to get the <a> tag to render similar the <li> (broken display: inline-block support... gaah HATE IE). – ephemient Sep 17 at 21:17
Besides, IIRC IE4 didn't recalculate CSS properties when dynamically changing classes... – ephemient Sep 17 at 21:29
Does anybody support IE4 anymore? – voyager Sep 17 at 21:30
1  
@ephemient: IE8 supports inline-block, but it took me really long to figure out you have to put it in IE8-mode (that is, X-UA-compatible). Why on earth do the MS guys still develop their own browser? Why don't they just say: "Well, we give it away for free anyway, so just build a new one on top of WebKit!"? Or simpler yet: Microsoft: Buy Opera! – Boldewyn Sep 18 at 6:51
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