vote up 1 vote down star

back story: i am designing a portfolio website for myself. on its home page, the logo is front and center but on the sub pages the logo is top & right.

i thought it would be a nice visual cue (upon clicking a link to a sub page) to use jquery to animate the movement of the logo from the middle to the corner of the page.

the issue: the sub page loads faster than the animation completes.

question: is there some way to pause the link-following until after the animation has completed?

flag
While this certainly is a neat trick... any sort of wait between clicking and the expected action occurring will frustrate the user. In this case, they'll see the logo move, then notice the entire page refreshes. I know I'd be annoyed. – Sam Dec 9 '08 at 7:01

7 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Hi Jon, You also need to return false or prevent the default action of the anchor click event otherwise the browser will just follow the href. Anyway agreed a live demo is better than 1000 words.

See a live demo here

e.g

 $('#myLink').click( function(ev){
   //prevent the default action of the event, this will stop the href in the anchor being followed
   //before the animation has started, u can also use return false;
   ev.preventDefault();
   //store a reference to the anchor tag
   var $self=$(this);
   //get the image and animate assuming the image is a direct child of the anchor, if not use .find
   $self.children('img').animate( {height:"10px"}, function(){
       //now get the anchor href and redirect the browser
       document.location = $self.attr('href');
   });
 });
link|flag
brilliant!! thank you so much! :) – jon Dec 9 '08 at 18:19
vote up 1 vote down

just in case anyone is interested in this variation...

i wanted the link itself to be separate from the image that is animated, i tinkered with the code a bit and now i have that working.

the javascript/jquery:

print(" $(function()
    {
        $('#myLink').click( function(ev){
            //prevent the default action of the event, this will stop the href in the anchor being followed
            //before the animation has started, u can also use return false;
            ev.preventDefault();
            //store a referene to the anchor tag
            var $self=$('img#myImage');
            var $link=$('a#myLink');
            //get the image and animate
            ($self).animate( {height:"10px"}, function(){
                //now get the anchor href and redirect the browser
                document.location = $link.attr('href');
            });
        });
    });

");

the markup:

print("<body>
<a id="myLink" href="http://www.google.co.uk">LINK</a>

<img id="myImage" src="http://www.derekallard.com/img/post_resources/jquery_ui_cap.png"/>

");

that said, i likely ugly'd up the code. so my apologies there.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

@allesklar:

thanks for your feedback, i was considering this point as well... here are my thoughts:

1) there is a subtle but real usability issue inherent in changing the location of the menu and so i think that, if done effectively, this technique can actually increase usability 2) i am planning on making the animation quite fast, we're talking like a single second or less. my goal is to play around with all the timing parameters until it simply increases the flow of the site rather than creating any frustrating sluggishness. 3) the site in general will be quite light and so the load time after the animation completes will be short 2) it is a portfolio, so i am trying to razzle dazzle a bit .. i realize that usability is as important (or more) here as anywhere, but in light of the above, i think the razzle dazzle ends up being a bonus. 4) i hate long intros as much as anyone ;)

that said, its a valid point and once i see the effect in action in my own site i may decide that i am unable to turn the balance in favour of this little trick! :)

thanks to everyone for your help !

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I know you probably don't want to hear this but what you are doing is a big no-no in terms of usability.

You want to create a cool effect and in so doing slow down your user's experience. Nowadays web visitors are very busy and when they click on a link they want to get there asap. You will lose a percentage of visitors in the process and will aggravate many others just for the sake of a little visual candy.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

so.. im quite a javascript/jquery novice and i can't make heads or tails of this part of Pim's answer:

print("document.location = $("thelink").attr('href'); ");

i tried the following, but it doesn't seem to be right:

print("document.location = $("http://example.com").attr('href'); ");

i think what i need is an example that doesn't require filling-in.
i.e. an example that already works that i can tinker with to figure out. or something more clearly commented. :)

i just don't have the mad jquery skills to understand what information i need to replace. :)

link|flag
The $() function is how jQuery selects the DOM element. What he means by "thelink" is something to access your link element. You could your link an id by doing [a id="mylink"]link text[/a], and then select it with: $("#mylink"). .attr() returns the value of the attribute of the selected DOM node – Sam Dec 9 '08 at 6:59
"example.com"; is actually the href, not the "link" – Sam Dec 9 '08 at 6:59
vote up 0 vote down

Try this:

 $("#thelink").click( function(){
  $(this).animate( { animation stuff }, "medium", "easeboth", function(){
    document.location = $(this).attr('href');  
  });
 });

Or when the link is not animated but the image (as your question states):

 $("#thelink").click( function(){
  $("#theImg").animate( { animation stuff }, "medium", "easeboth", function(){
    document.location = $("thelink").attr('href');  
  });
 });
link|flag
hi, sorry, but im quite a javascript/jquery novice and i can't make heads or tails of this part of your answer: document.location = $("thelink").attr('href'); i tried this, but doesn't seems to be right: document.location = $("google.com").attr('href'); would it b possible to give ex? – jon Dec 9 '08 at 4:01
this will not stop the client following the link unless you prevent the default action or return false from the click handler – redsquare Dec 9 '08 at 6:59
vote up 1 vote down

You should be able to use the animate function listed here: (jquery doc)

It says that the callback should not be executed until the animation is complete.

callback (Optional) Function A function to be executed whenever the animation completes, executes once for each element animated against.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.