16
var mdflag;
var count = 0;

document.addEventListener("mousedown",mdown,false);
    document.addEventListener("mouseup",mup,false);
}


function mdown()
{
    mdflag=true;
    while(mdflag)
    document.getElementById("testdiv").innerHTML = count++;

}
function mup()
{
    mdflag = false;
}

I'm wanting to run code while the mouse is down, i cant find anything to suggest i can do while(mousedown) so i've tryed making a flag for mousedown which is reset on mouse up however i beleive the while loop is whats causing me to go get stuck in an infinite loop.

Any advice to help with what i'm trying to acheive?

3 Answers 3

21

You have to invoke the mousedown activity in some reasonable interval. I'd do this:

var mousedownID = -1;  //Global ID of mouse down interval
function mousedown(event) {
  if(mousedownID==-1)  //Prevent multimple loops!
     mousedownID = setInterval(whilemousedown, 100 /*execute every 100ms*/);


}
function mouseup(event) {
   if(mousedownID!=-1) {  //Only stop if exists
     clearInterval(mousedownID);
     mousedownID=-1;
   }

}
function whilemousedown() {
   /*here put your code*/
}
//Assign events
document.addEventListener("mousedown", mousedown);
document.addEventListener("mouseup", mouseup);
//Also clear the interval when user leaves the window with mouse
document.addEventListener("mouseout", mouseup);
8
  • Can i ask why -1 is used as apposed to 0?
    – Larry
    Mar 19, 2013 at 17:07
  • I'm not sure if id of 0 may exist - and I'm used to use -1 for null values. In javascript, you can directly set mousedownID = null and ask if(mousedownID===null) (checking datatype with === for sure). Mar 19, 2013 at 17:40
  • 2
    @TomášZato Btw, you don't necessarily have to test for null before calling clearInterval(). As with clearTimeout(): "Passing an invalid ID [...] does not have any effect (and doesn't throw an exception)." Though these methods aren't actually standardized, nearly all current implementations follow this. Mar 19, 2013 at 18:42
  • Good from you to point this out. But it is still discutatible, if clearTimeout checks the ID faster than == operator. It may, for example, loop through an array of timeout ID's, That would be slower. Mar 19, 2013 at 18:49
  • This doesn't really work that well because the event isn't being updated. May 22, 2021 at 13:15
6

You can't do that, as your function must end before another event is processed, but you could repetitively call a function until the mouse is up :

var timer;
document.addEventListener("mousedown", function(){
     timer=setInterval(function(){
          document.getElementById("testdiv").innerHTML = count++;
     }, 100); // the above code is executed every 100 ms
});
document.addEventListener("mouseup", function(){
    if (timer) clearInterval(timer)
});
2
  • 1
    You could also declare timer in the outside scope, as the OP was doing with mdflag, and move the mouseup event out of mousedown so it isn't continuing to add more of them. Mar 19, 2013 at 16:44
  • Did you think what will happen, if I press the button and leave window? Mar 19, 2013 at 16:45
-1

You need to use setInterval to execute your function and clearInternal to stop

let interval = setInterval(function(){
    console.log("executing...");
}, 0);


document.addEventListener("mouseup", function(){
    clearInterval(interval); 
    console.log('End'); 
});
1
  • How is this any better or different from drunken bot's answer?
    – FireFuro99
    Feb 13, 2022 at 15:05

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