What's Going On
Problem:
pointer-events
support was added in IE11. IE10 is ignoring this, and because your overlay is on top, the mouse is interacting with it. We can get around this though!
Solution:
We need to remove dependency on that CSS rule. To do this, we need to do two things:
1.) We need to make the hover color stays applied even if the :hover
effect isn't happening. We can add another selector to our CSS so that the .clicked
class will cause the colors.
2.) We need to address what happens when .overlay_text
is clicked, and use that to trigger the shrinking animation.
Code
1.) Hover Effect
We need to add in another select to every place :hover
is used:
Old CSS:
.first_box:hover {
...background color rule ...
}
New CSS:
.first_box:hover, .first_box.clicked {
...background color rule ...
}
Duplicate the above for all 4 box rules.
2.) .overlay-text
Trigger
We need to cause a click on .overlay-text
to trigger the shrinking.
Old JS:
$('div').on('click', function (e) {
if ($(this).hasClass('clicked')) {
setTimeout(function (div) {
return function () { div.css('z-index', '') ; } ;
} ($(this)), 1000) ;
$('.overlay-text').hide();
}
else {
$(this).css('z-index', 400) ;
setTimeout(function(){$('.overlay-text').show();},1000);
}
$(this).toggleClass('clicked') ;
});
New JS:
We have to add a new selector to the .on()
code, then we have to add .clicked
to both the selected square, add the overlaying section. Finally we have to remove .clicked
from both. We can't use .toggleClass()
because we are adding to $(this)
and removing from all div
s.
$('div, .overlay-text').on('click', function (e) {
if ($(this).hasClass('clicked')) {
setTimeout(function (div) {
return function () { div.css('z-index', '') ; } ;
} ($(this)), 1000) ;
$('.overlay-text').hide();
$('div').removeClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').removeClass('clicked');
}
else {
$(this).css('z-index', 400) ;
setTimeout(function(){$('.overlay-text').show();},1000);
$(this).addClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').addClass('clicked');
}
});
Summary
I've tested in IE10 and it works.
Working Example:
Extra
If I may say, the CSS structure you are using could be improved and your animations will look a lot better. Chrome and IE both flicker during the animation of the two left blocks.
This is because their width AND position is being animated. If you position them from right:0
, only their width will animate and it'll look a lot smoother.
I've created a Fiddle for you to address the above. I used absolute positioning. The CSS ends up being shorter, but mainly the animation doesn't flicker. Take a look:
Working Example:
Extra 2
As per comments from OP, we are going to prevent users from double clicking. Since all animations take 1 second, we will disable clicking from triggering anything for 1 second after each click.
It's actually pretty simple to do. In the Extra 1 above, we cleaned up the JS, and it became this:
$('div, .overlay-text').on('click', function (e) {
if ($(this).hasClass('clicked')) {
$('.overlay-text').hide();
$('div').removeClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').removeClass('clicked');
}
else {
setTimeout(function(){$('.overlay-text').show();},1000);
$(this).addClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').addClass('clicked');
}
});
We just need to add a global variable that starts true. When once the click happens, set it to false immediately, and after 1 second, set it to true. Then we just check to see if it's true, and don't do anything at all if it's false:
var notdouble = 1;
$('div, .overlay-text').on('click', function (e) {
if (notdouble) {
if ($(this).hasClass('clicked')) {
$('.overlay-text').hide();
$('div').removeClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').removeClass('clicked');
}
else {
setTimeout(function(){$('.overlay-text').show();},1000);
$(this).addClass('clicked');
$('.overlay-text').addClass('clicked');
}
notdouble=0;
setTimeout(function(){notdouble=1;},1000);
}
});
Working Example:
Note, this builds from the new structure in the Fiddle version 13, so it won't work exactly with the fixed version of the original structure. The concept can be adapted though.
clicked
class was not removed from the div when I clicked it the second time.