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If I have this HTML

<img src="aaa.png" id="a" style="filter: alpha(opacity=100)"/>

Then this javascript works in IE6

document.getElementById("a").filters.alpha.opacity = 60;

But if no style is set

<img src="aaa.png" id="a" style=""/>

The javascript throws an error 'filters.alpha' is null or not an object

This code works

document.getElementById("a").style.filter = "alpha(opacity=60)";

But then the other filters applied to the image are overwritten. So the question is: How to add alpha filter to any HTML element and keep the other filters in IE?

edit I would like pure javascript (not jQuery) solution

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3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Unfortunately, it seems to me you can only add new elements through the style.filter property, with filters you can only manipulate already existing ones.

filter is a collection object, you can find the docs here: filters Collection. It gives you a nice and easy way to play with your existing filters, you can turn them on and off (enabled), etc.

For example, you can use

obj.filters.item("DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha").opacity=20;

or (if alpha was you first filter declaration)

obj.filters.item(0).opacity=20;

CLASSES

Most of the time you're better off storing your filter declarations under certain classes in your CSS, and only using JS to assign the right classes instead of manipulating style values directly.

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No. The code you suggest throws an exception if Alpha filter was not set and nothing happens (at least in my IE6 tests). You may use style.filter+=... - but in this case the strings grows more and more. – Jan Turoň Mar 10 '11 at 17:51
Oh misunderstood... I just gave a nice way to access the current filters, but I also emphasized that with filters you cannot add new ones. – bažmegakapa Mar 10 '11 at 17:56
Let me rephrase this a bit... – bažmegakapa Mar 10 '11 at 17:57
Yes. At least I came to the same conclusion from the same MSDN source at the same time :-) It helped me to create a bulletproof(?) function (see my post here). With the enabled property, it is possible to create / modify / unset any filter in any IE. So solved, answer accepted, thanks. – Jan Turoň Mar 10 '11 at 18:34

After some more testing, I come with this JSON solution

var filter = function(obj,f,params) {
  var found, nf, dx = "DXImageTransform.Microsoft.";

  // check if DXImageTransform.Microsoft.[Filter] or [Filter] filter is set
  try { nf = obj.filters.item(dx+f); found = true; } catch(e) {}
  if(!found) try { nf = obj.filters.item(f); found = true; } catch(e) {}

  // filter is set - change existing one
  if(found) {
    nf.Enabled = true; // if exists, it might be disabled
    if(params) for(var i in params) nf[i] = params[i];
  }

  // filter is not set - apply new one
  else {
    nf = "";
    if(params) for(var i in params) nf+= i.toLowerCase()+"="+params[i]+",";
    if(params) nf = "("+nf.substr(0,nf.length-1)+")";
    obj.style.filter+= "progid:"+dx+f+nf+" ";
  }

  // hasLayout property hack
  if(!obj.style.zoom) obj.style.zoom = 1;
};

Example

var obj = document.getElementById("a");
if(document.body.filters) filter(obj,"Alpha",{Opacity:50});

I hope this works, if anybody finds a problem, please tell me.

Sources

obj.filters property http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms537452(VS.85).aspx

filter.Alpha http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms532967(VS.85).aspx

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You can give n number of filters you want but just keep appending them one after the other separated by a space. For example ,

STYLE="filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.MotionBlur(strength=50)
        progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(opacity=60);"

Check this link for more : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms532847%28v=vs.85%29.aspx

I hope that answers your question.

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Yes, this is useful. But how to add filters by javascript? – Jan Turoň Mar 10 '11 at 14:29

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