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Can somebody please tell me if it is possible and how to blur the background using the dimming option in "Highslide JS", I know it might not work with some browsers but I am still willing to give it a try. Secondly, can someonbe tell me how to trigger the dimmer on mouse click and not on pop up image load as is the default.

Thanks for Your patience!

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On your second question, do you just want the background to dim instantly, instead of gradually? If so, try:

hs.dimmingDuration = 0;

Truly triggering the dimming before the image expansion occurs requires some hacking of highslide-full.js. You'll have to do some tinkering. You need to move this:

if (this.dimmingOpacity) hs.dim(this);

From the afterExpand() function to the show() function.

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  • BTW, the regular Highslide forums are back - you should probably start posting there, instead of here: forum.highcharts.com Jul 26, 2013 at 11:52
  • And when you do post here, don't tag the question with anything other than "highslide." If you do, the SO regulars will close the question because they don't understand it. Better that they don't see it at all. Jul 26, 2013 at 12:05
  • Thanks for all the tips I will try them out. Yeah sure, I will ask arroud there. I wasn't aware about the tagging part, I will be more mindful in the future, thanks again for you swift reply :) Jul 26, 2013 at 13:34
  • Hey just wanted to let You know I did exactly as you suggested and it work perfectly, You really know your stuff :), just one thing I did differently, instead of highslide-full.js. I changed the code in highslide-with-gallery.js, because it didn't work when I changed it in the first one. Now I just need to figure out how to write the js code for background blur effect on dimming. Jul 26, 2013 at 14:43
  • It probably didn't work when you changed highslide-full.js because your page was still loading highslide-with-gallery.js. I would always use highslide-full.js, which is the full script, with all of the capabilities. The others, like highslide-with-gallery.js, are just subsets of the full script, and may not contain the routines needed to make other things work. The full script is smaller than a typical single image, so there's really no penalty for loading the whole thing. Jul 26, 2013 at 15:01

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