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I have an HTML table, with a link in the first column. I want to allow the user to click on anywhere in the row to activate that link. At the same time I would like to preserve the middle click and ctrl+click functionality of opening a new tab/window. Here is an example of the table:

<table id="row_link"> 
  <tbody> 
    <tr>
      <td><a href="link1.html">link</a></td> 
      <td>info 1</td> 
    </tr>       
    <tr>
      <td><a href="link2.html">link</a></td> 
      <td>info 2</td> 
    </tr>       
  </tbody> 
</table>

Using jQuery I can allow the user to left click anywhere in a row:

$("table#row_link tbody tr").click(function () {
    window.location = $(this).find("a:first").attr("href");
});

This of course disables the standard middle click and ctrl+click functionality of opening a new tab. Is there a better way to allow users to click on the entire row, while preserving the standard middle click and ctrl+clcik behavior?

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12 Answers

vote up 14 vote down check

Unfortunately there is no way to simulate a link and all associated behaviour in every browser. Therefore, the only way to achieve what you want is to have a link that follows the cursor around the <tr> element; this link would be invisible so, to the user, it looks like they're clicking on the <tr> but they're actually clicking on a hidden link. Using this method, the middle-button, ctrl+click and any other behaviours are left intact!

Here's a DEMO: http://jsbin.com/ufugo

And here's the code:

$("table tr").each(function(){

    var $link = $('a:first', this).clone(true),
        dim = {
            x: [
                $(this).offset().left,
                $(this).offset().left + $(this).outerWidth()
            ],
            y: [
                $(this).offset().top,
                $(this).offset().top + $(this).outerHeight()
            ]
        }

    $link
        .click(function(){
            $(this).blur();
        })
        .css({
            position: 'absolute',
            display: 'none',
            // Opacity:0  means it's invisible
            opacity: 0
        })
        .appendTo('body');

    $(this).mouseover(function(){
        $link.show();
    });

    $(document).mousemove(function(e){
        var y = e.pageY,
            x = e.pageX;
        // Check to see if cursor is outside of <tr>
        // If it is then hide the cloned link (display:none;)
        if (x < dim.x[0] || x > dim.x[1] || y < dim.y[0] || y > dim.y[1]) {  
            return $link.hide();
        }
        $link.css({
            top: e.pageY - 5,
            left: e.pageX - 5
        })
    });

});

EDIT:

I created a jQuery plugin using a slightly better aproach than above: http://james.padolsey.com/javascript/table-rows-as-clickable-anchors/

link|flag
Great plug-in, it really improved the performance of your example code (for larger tables)! I'm having a small problem, on slower computers when I move the mouse rapidly across the table, rows remain highlighted even after the mouse is no longer hovering over the row. – Brian Fisher May 25 at 19:11
I'm in the process of fixing (trying) it right now. – J-P May 25 at 19:53
I was able to fix this by transferring the tr mouseover events to the $targetLink, similar to what you did for the mouseout events. After that I bound to the tr mouseover event with the $targetLink.show(); – Brian Fisher May 25 at 20:16
2  
This is pretty smart. And I like the idea, however it's a problem that now you can't select any of the table data. +1 though. – Pim Jager May 26 at 9:13
1  
@Pim, the same is true for regular anchors. It's a shame there's no compromise to be met. – J-P May 26 at 9:45
show 4 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

You could grab the event and look at it's event code. But there is no real way to know what a browser's behavior for those events.

link|flag
vote up -3 vote down

you need to remove the < tbody > tag

and just use the 'href' attribute to get the link destination and dont to select the anchor < a > tag too because thats contains the href attribute.

$("table#row_link tbody tr a").click(function () {

     window.location = $(this).attr("href");

});

or simply make the link open a new tab.

i hope that helps you.

link|flag
Thanks for the idea, however, that only allows users to click on the actual link not anywhere in the row. Also I'm not sure why removing the tbody tag would help. – Brian Fisher May 21 at 2:21
vote up 0 vote down

Here's something that should work: Instead of using window.location, us .click() to emulate a click on the first inside the element. Also, use a conditional to check for Ctl+Click.

Should look like this:

$("table#row_link tbody tr").click(function (e) {
    if(e.ctrlKey) { 
        // Run Ctl+Click Code Here
    } else { 
        $(this).children('a').eq(0).click(); 
    }
}

Hope this helps!

Dave Romero

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vote up 7 vote down

EDIT

This is simple problem that has a simple solution. I don't see a need for nasty hacks that might break on some browsers or take processing time. Especially because there is a neat and easy CSS solution.

First here is a demo

Inspired by @Nick solution for a very similar issue, I'm proposing a simple css+jquery solution.

First, here is the mini-plugin I wrote. The plugin will wrap every cells with a link:

jQuery.fn.linker = function(selector) {
    $(this).each(function() {
        var href = $(selector, this).attr('href');
        if (href) {
            var link = $('<a href="' + $(selector, this).attr('href') + '"></a>').css({
                'text-decoration': 'none',
                'display': 'block',
                'padding': '0px',
                'color': $(this).css('color')
            })
            $(this).children()
                   .css('padding', '0')
                   .wrapInner(link);
        }
    });
};

And here is a usage example:

$('table.collection tr').linker('a:first');

And All the CSS you need:

table.collection {
    border-collapse:collapse;
}

It's as simple as that.


You can use the event object to check the mouse click type. This article is discussing a similar issue.

Anyway, here is how to do it:

$("table#row_link tbody tr").click(function () {

    if((!$.browser.msie && e.button == 0) || ($.browser.msie && e.button == 1)){
        if (!e.ctrlKey) {
            // Left mouse button was clicked without ctrl
            window.location = $(this).find("a:first").attr("href");
        }
    }
});
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Thanks for the article reference. This gets me most of the way to where I want. The only issue I have is that in the case of middle mouse or ctrl+click case I open a new window using window.open($(this).find("a:first").attr("href"));, which puts the focus on the new window. I want to keep focus on the current window so users can open several tabs each corresponding to rows in the table. Thanks for you help. – Brian Fisher May 25 at 3:02
Careful with your undefined variables. Since href and link inside the $().each wasn't defined with 'var', they'll be global. So you might get wierd errors with href or link values from a previous iteration. – gregers May 26 at 7:58
@gregers, fixed thanks – Nadia Alramli May 26 at 11:06
vote up -1 vote down

Try putting the a around the td and then apply a display:block CSS element to the td.

That should make the entire area of the td clickable with all buttons as a "normal" link.

An example is probably better:

<table id="row_link"> 
  <tbody> 
    <tr>
      <a href="link1.html"><td style="display: block;">link</td></a> 
      <td>info 1</td> 
    </tr>       
    <tr>
      <a href="link2.html"><td style="display: block;">link</td></a>
      <td>info 2</td> 
    </tr>       
  </tbody> 
</table>

A similar approach has worked in the past for me, although it was not exactly for table elements. Untested with tables so try it.

link|flag
Just realised that perhaps you wanted both TD's to be clickable in the row. My suggestion is only for the specific TD containing the actual anchor. I guess you can still apply the same concept to the TR instead of the TD. Just move the A outside the TR so it "surrounds" it. – mr-euro May 23 at 22:26
...obviously applying the display: block to the TR now. instead of the TD. – mr-euro May 23 at 22:27
a table cell in an anchor??? – Darko Z May 25 at 2:07
Yes, why not? As written above I have not had the chance to test it, but since the method works for other elements why not give it a try. – mr-euro May 25 at 8:14
Heard of semantics? – J-P May 25 at 9:31
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

This plugin for jQuery should do the trick:

http://abeautifulsite.net/notebook/68

EDIT: Sorry, I misread your post. You want to "preserve" the middle and right click default capabilities. The script above would let you handle the right click. I am a bit surprised that handling the left click kills off the middle and right clicks. Does that happen in every browser? Or only certain ones?

link|flag
vote up -2 vote down

I think the biggerlink plugin will do what you ask for. Here's the

link|flag
This doesn't preserve middle-click or ctrl-click... – J-P May 25 at 9:32
vote up 5 vote down

You want this:

$('table#row_link tbody tr').mousedown( function(e){
	if(e.ctrlKey || (!$.browser.msie && e.button == 1) || ($.browser.msie && e.button == 4)){
		//middle mouse button or ctrl+click
	} else {
		//normal left click
	}
});

This is tested in FF3.0.10, Chrome 1.0 and IE6. I use the mousedown event because neither firefox or IE passes the middle mouse button click to a .click(fn) event.

link|flag
This gets me most of the way to where I want (just a quick note you are missing a closing parentheses at the end of your if statement. The only issue I have is that in the middle mouse or ctrl+click case I open a new window using window.open($(this).find("a:first").attr("href"));, which puts the focus on the new window. I want to keep focus on the current window so users can open several tabs each corresponding to rows in the table. Thanks for you help. – Brian Fisher May 25 at 3:00
vote up 0 vote down

You can make a link and let it floting around in your tr, biding to mouveover event, update href and position

create one pixel link

<table id="row_link">....</table>
<a id="onepixel" style="position:absolute;z-index:1000;width:1px;height:1px;"></a>

update href and position on mouse over

$("#row_link tr").mouseover(
   function(event){
      //update href
      $("#onepixel").attr("href",$(this).find("a:first").attr("href"));
      //update position, just move to current mouse position
      $("#onepixel").css("top",event.pageY).css("left",event.pageX);
   }
);
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I would attack this from the HTML/css side. This used to be a common problem when most sites did all layout in tables.

First make the contents of all table cells into links. If you don't want them to look like links you can use CSS to remove the underline from the 'non link' cells. But they will be links, which is semantically what you want anyway.

Next you want to make the link expand to fill the entire cell. StackOverflow already knows the answer to this:

td a { display: block; width: 100%; height: 100%; line-height: 100%; }

With a typical table with no spaces between the cells the entire row will be clickable. And since this relies on no tricks or browser specific hacks it should work everywhere.

link|flag
vote up -1 vote down

One problem - what if jquery isn't used?

...

FAIL.

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