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I have noticed that in javascript frameworks elements such as dialogs, tooltips and alerts mostly appear at end of body.

I'm making my own implementation of these elements and trying to make it failproof. I'm repeating some techniques like using transparent iframe to overlay embeded objects in old browsers, and so on.

What restrictions could I face if I place my dialog/tooltip somewhere deep inside of the DOM tree with {position: fixed}? I'm afraid if there are some dangers to this approach, because big frameworks never use it.

I want to support IE8+.

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    Those elements are usually placed there because of z-ordering. The last element in the element tree is on top.
    – Teemu
    Feb 16, 2015 at 17:08
  • I agree, z-ordering is a consideration.. actually, node placement may also be a consideration.. that's, as a framework.. you don't want to imped on the cssstyledeclaration that users might use.. like :nth-child().. or other implicit patterns developers and designers have gone with.. Feb 16, 2015 at 17:12
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    @lujcon, there are larger concerns as to why you put scripts at the end.. Feb 16, 2015 at 17:16
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    when you say deep inside.. you have to be aware of overflow and position declarations of all the parent containers.. Feb 16, 2015 at 17:19
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    How about the fact that it's really easy to say document.body.appendChild(...)?
    – user488187
    Feb 16, 2015 at 17:36

2 Answers 2

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Aside from z-ordering that is a very valid point made by Teemu, another major consideration in JS frameworks is speed of execution / speed of lookup.

The DOM in JS terms is one large object. The deeper into an object javascript needs to go to get what it's being asked for, the less performant the script gets, take a look at this answer.

Therefore it makes sense to keep everything that is probably going to be cloned or deep copied at a sensible nesting level and in the correct z-order. That happens to be toward the end of the body and usually wrapped by at most one containing element.

There may be other reasons but the depth / nesting sprung to mind as a consideration I'd take into account.

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  • There's still no clear answer about z-ordering problems. Also, not sure if tooltips/dialogs should be cloned from one to another, but not from special tooltips/dialog templates store.
    – nya
    Feb 16, 2015 at 18:03
  • Sure, not everything would need cloning but in terms of nesting it provides a convenient location for template / ready to use html. z-ordering is important for modals / tooltips etc. as they are 99.9% of the time required to show above all other content. Giving them naturally higher z-indexes by DOM location makes a lot of sense. Feb 16, 2015 at 19:26
  • How much sense in natural leveling with such kind of z-index management puu.sh/fZYGP/36209d51cf.png ? That is the question.
    – nya
    Feb 16, 2015 at 21:38
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Short answer - very few techniques like this are "always necessary". JavaScript can easily remove items from their natural position in the DOM and relocate them at will.

Long answer - I don't think approaching this from a JavaScript first angle is correct. Look at it in terms of where the content belongs naturally within the hierarchy of the rest of the DOM.

For example, if you are talking about a modal dialog, then the chrome (the container elements) usually do not belong within the rest of the DOM - they exist only to contain and provide modal overlay functionality for the content within. This chrome does not participate in the outline of the DOM and the rest of the content. In that case, unless you are able to load them separately via ajax or embed the chrome HTML within the JavaScript, then the closest you will come to removing them from the main DOM is to append them to the bottom of the main DOM content. Note that this disregards the upcoming TEMPLATE element (http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/webcomponents/template/) which is designed for just this purpose.

However, the content of your dialog might very well belong within the main content of the DOM - either as an element, or as an attribute (i.e. title or data-) to an associated element. This would especially be true for tooltip text.

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  • I can easily move nodes to end of page when it's loaded, as frameworks do, but in my case I'm trying to use independent blocks of HTML, where each block contain all his stuff (including dialogs) all time of page life.
    – nya
    Feb 16, 2015 at 18:12

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