2937

I have some HTML menus, which I show completely when a user clicks on the head of these menus. I would like to hide these elements when the user clicks outside the menus' area.

Is something like this possible with jQuery?

$("#menuscontainer").clickOutsideThisElement(function() {
    // Hide the menus
});
7

91 Answers 91

2016

Note: Using stopPropagation is something that should be avoided as it breaks normal event flow in the DOM. See this CSS Tricks article for more information. Consider using this method instead.

Attach a click event to the document body which closes the window. Attach a separate click event to the container which stops propagation to the document body.

$(window).click(function() {
  //Hide the menus if visible
});

$('#menucontainer').click(function(event){
  event.stopPropagation();
});
11
  • 813
    This breaks standard behaviour of many things, including buttons and links, contained within #menucontainer. I am surprised this answer is so popular.
    – Art
    Jun 12, 2010 at 8:00
  • 83
    This doesn't break behavior of anything inside #menucontainer, since it is at the bottom of the propagation chain for anything inside of it. Jun 16, 2010 at 19:55
  • 102
    its very beautyfull but you should use $('html').click() not body. The body always has the height of its content. It there is not a lot of content or the screen is very high, it only works on the part filled by the body.
    – meo
    Feb 25, 2011 at 15:35
  • 115
    I am also surprised that this solution got so many votes. This will fail for any element outside that has stopPropagation jsfiddle.net/Flandre/vaNFw/3
    – Andre
    May 8, 2012 at 12:32
  • 146
    Philip Walton explains very well why this answer isn't the best solution: css-tricks.com/dangers-stopping-event-propagation
    – Tom
    May 20, 2014 at 10:52
1621

You can listen for a click event on document and then make sure #menucontainer is not an ancestor or the target of the clicked element by using .closest().

If it is not, then the clicked element is outside of the #menucontainer and you can safely hide it.

$(document).click(function(event) { 
  var $target = $(event.target);
  if(!$target.closest('#menucontainer').length && 
  $('#menucontainer').is(":visible")) {
    $('#menucontainer').hide();
  }        
});

Edit – 2017-06-23

You can also clean up after the event listener if you plan to dismiss the menu and want to stop listening for events. This function will clean up only the newly created listener, preserving any other click listeners on document. With ES2015 syntax:

export function hideOnClickOutside(selector) {
  const outsideClickListener = (event) => {
    const $target = $(event.target);
    if (!$target.closest(selector).length && $(selector).is(':visible')) {
        $(selector).hide();
        removeClickListener();
    }
  }

  const removeClickListener = () => {
    document.removeEventListener('click', outsideClickListener);
  }

  document.addEventListener('click', outsideClickListener);
}

Edit – 2018-03-11

For those who don't want to use jQuery. Here's the above code in plain vanillaJS (ECMAScript6).

function hideOnClickOutside(element) {
    const outsideClickListener = event => {
        if (!element.contains(event.target) && isVisible(element)) { // or use: event.target.closest(selector) === null
          element.style.display = 'none';
          removeClickListener();
        }
    }

    const removeClickListener = () => {
        document.removeEventListener('click', outsideClickListener);
    }

    document.addEventListener('click', outsideClickListener);
}

const isVisible = elem => !!elem && !!( elem.offsetWidth || elem.offsetHeight || elem.getClientRects().length ); // source (2018-03-11): https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/master/src/css/hiddenVisibleSelectors.js 

NOTE: This is based on Alex comment to just use !element.contains(event.target) instead of the jQuery part.

But element.closest() is now also available in all major browsers (the W3C version differs a bit from the jQuery one). Polyfills can be found here: Element.closest()

Edit – 2020-05-21

In the case where you want the user to be able to click-and-drag inside the element, then release the mouse outside the element, without closing the element:

      ...
      let lastMouseDownX = 0;
      let lastMouseDownY = 0;
      let lastMouseDownWasOutside = false;

      const mouseDownListener = (event: MouseEvent) => {
        lastMouseDownX = event.offsetX;
        lastMouseDownY = event.offsetY;
        lastMouseDownWasOutside = !$(event.target).closest(element).length;
      }
      document.addEventListener('mousedown', mouseDownListener);

And in outsideClickListener:

const outsideClickListener = event => {
        const deltaX = event.offsetX - lastMouseDownX;
        const deltaY = event.offsetY - lastMouseDownY;
        const distSq = (deltaX * deltaX) + (deltaY * deltaY);
        const isDrag = distSq > 3;
        const isDragException = isDrag && !lastMouseDownWasOutside;

        if (!element.contains(event.target) && isVisible(element) && !isDragException) { // or use: event.target.closest(selector) === null
          element.style.display = 'none';
          removeClickListener();
          document.removeEventListener('mousedown', mouseDownListener); // Or add this line to removeClickListener()
        }
    }
7
  • 34
    I tried many of the other answers, but only this one worked. Thanks. The code I ended up using was this: $(document).click( function(event) { if( $(event.target).closest('.window').length == 0 ) { $('.window').fadeOut('fast'); } } );
    – Pistos
    Apr 5, 2012 at 19:30
  • 42
    I actually ended up going with this solution because it better supports multiple menus on the same page where clicking on a second menu while a first is open will leave the first open in the stopPropagation solution. Apr 7, 2012 at 23:41
  • 15
    Excellent answer. This is the way to go when you have multiple items which you wish to close.
    – John
    May 8, 2013 at 15:23
  • 33
    Without jQuery - !element.contains(event.target) using Node.contains()
    – Alex Ross
    Jul 31, 2015 at 1:56
  • 5
    If you're reading this then you should probably check out some of the more modern answers to solve this that are way more readable than this answer.
    – maxshuty
    Apr 24, 2022 at 14:58
431

How to detect a click outside an element?

The reason that this question is so popular and has so many answers is that it is deceptively complex. After almost eight years and dozens of answers, I am genuinely surprised to see how little care has been given to accessibility.

I would like to hide these elements when the user clicks outside the menus' area.

This is a noble cause and is the actual issue. The title of the question—which is what most answers appear to attempt to address—contains an unfortunate red herring.

Hint: it's the word "click"!

You don't actually want to bind click handlers.

If you're binding click handlers to close the dialog, you've already failed. The reason you've failed is that not everyone triggers click events. Users not using a mouse will be able to escape your dialog (and your pop-up menu is arguably a type of dialog) by pressing Tab, and they then won't be able to read the content behind the dialog without subsequently triggering a click event.

So let's rephrase the question.

How does one close a dialog when a user is finished with it?

This is the goal. Unfortunately, now we need to bind the userisfinishedwiththedialog event, and that binding isn't so straightforward.

So how can we detect that a user has finished using a dialog?

focusout event

A good start is to determine if focus has left the dialog.

Hint: be careful with the blur event, blur doesn't propagate if the event was bound to the bubbling phase!

jQuery's focusout will do just fine. If you can't use jQuery, then you can use blur during the capturing phase:

element.addEventListener('blur', ..., true);
//                       use capture: ^^^^

Also, for many dialogs you'll need to allow the container to gain focus. Add tabindex="-1" to allow the dialog to receive focus dynamically without otherwise interrupting the tabbing flow.

$('a').on('click', function () {
  $(this.hash).toggleClass('active').focus();
});

$('div').on('focusout', function () {
  $(this).removeClass('active');
});
div {
  display: none;
}
.active {
  display: block;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<a href="#example">Example</a>
<div id="example" tabindex="-1">
  Lorem ipsum <a href="http://example.com">dolor</a> sit amet.
</div>


If you play with that demo for more than a minute you should quickly start seeing issues.

The first is that the link in the dialog isn't clickable. Attempting to click on it or tab to it will lead to the dialog closing before the interaction takes place. This is because focusing the inner element triggers a focusout event before triggering a focusin event again.

The fix is to queue the state change on the event loop. This can be done by using setImmediate(...), or setTimeout(..., 0) for browsers that don't support setImmediate. Once queued it can be cancelled by a subsequent focusin:

$('.submenu').on({
  focusout: function (e) {
    $(this).data('submenuTimer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this).removeClass('submenu--active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function (e) {
    clearTimeout($(this).data('submenuTimer'));
  }
});

$('a').on('click', function () {
  $(this.hash).toggleClass('active').focus();
});

$('div').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this).data('timer'));
  }
});
div {
  display: none;
}
.active {
  display: block;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<a href="#example">Example</a>
<div id="example" tabindex="-1">
  Lorem ipsum <a href="http://example.com">dolor</a> sit amet.
</div>

The second issue is that the dialog won't close when the link is pressed again. This is because the dialog loses focus, triggering the close behavior, after which the link click triggers the dialog to reopen.

Similar to the previous issue, the focus state needs to be managed. Given that the state change has already been queued, it's just a matter of handling focus events on the dialog triggers:

This should look familiar
$('a').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this.hash).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this.hash).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this.hash).data('timer'));  
  }
});

$('a').on('click', function () {
  $(this.hash).toggleClass('active').focus();
});

$('div').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this).data('timer'));
  }
});

$('a').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this.hash).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this.hash).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this.hash).data('timer'));  
  }
});
div {
  display: none;
}
.active {
  display: block;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<a href="#example">Example</a>
<div id="example" tabindex="-1">
  Lorem ipsum <a href="http://example.com">dolor</a> sit amet.
</div>


Esc key

If you thought you were done by handling the focus states, there's more you can do to simplify the user experience.

This is often a "nice to have" feature, but it's common that when you have a modal or popup of any sort that the Esc key will close it out.

keydown: function (e) {
  if (e.which === 27) {
    $(this).removeClass('active');
    e.preventDefault();
  }
}

$('a').on('click', function () {
  $(this.hash).toggleClass('active').focus();
});

$('div').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this).data('timer'));
  },
  keydown: function (e) {
    if (e.which === 27) {
      $(this).removeClass('active');
      e.preventDefault();
    }
  }
});

$('a').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this.hash).data('timer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this.hash).removeClass('active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this.hash).data('timer'));  
  }
});
div {
  display: none;
}
.active {
  display: block;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<a href="#example">Example</a>
<div id="example" tabindex="-1">
  Lorem ipsum <a href="http://example.com">dolor</a> sit amet.
</div>


If you know you have focusable elements within the dialog, you won't need to focus the dialog directly. If you're building a menu, you could focus the first menu item instead.

click: function (e) {
  $(this.hash)
    .toggleClass('submenu--active')
    .find('a:first')
    .focus();
  e.preventDefault();
}

$('.menu__link').on({
  click: function (e) {
    $(this.hash)
      .toggleClass('submenu--active')
      .find('a:first')
      .focus();
    e.preventDefault();
  },
  focusout: function () {
    $(this.hash).data('submenuTimer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this.hash).removeClass('submenu--active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this.hash).data('submenuTimer'));  
  }
});

$('.submenu').on({
  focusout: function () {
    $(this).data('submenuTimer', setTimeout(function () {
      $(this).removeClass('submenu--active');
    }.bind(this), 0));
  },
  focusin: function () {
    clearTimeout($(this).data('submenuTimer'));
  },
  keydown: function (e) {
    if (e.which === 27) {
      $(this).removeClass('submenu--active');
      e.preventDefault();
    }
  }
});
.menu {
  list-style: none;
  margin: 0;
  padding: 0;
}
.menu:after {
  clear: both;
  content: '';
  display: table;
}
.menu__item {
  float: left;
  position: relative;
}

.menu__link {
  background-color: lightblue;
  color: black;
  display: block;
  padding: 0.5em 1em;
  text-decoration: none;
}
.menu__link:hover,
.menu__link:focus {
  background-color: black;
  color: lightblue;
}

.submenu {
  border: 1px solid black;
  display: none;
  left: 0;
  list-style: none;
  margin: 0;
  padding: 0;
  position: absolute;
  top: 100%;
}
.submenu--active {
  display: block;
}

.submenu__item {
  width: 150px;
}

.submenu__link {
  background-color: lightblue;
  color: black;
  display: block;
  padding: 0.5em 1em;
  text-decoration: none;
}

.submenu__link:hover,
.submenu__link:focus {
  background-color: black;
  color: lightblue;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<ul class="menu">
  <li class="menu__item">
    <a class="menu__link" href="#menu-1">Menu 1</a>
    <ul class="submenu" id="menu-1" tabindex="-1">
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#1">Example 1</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#2">Example 2</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#3">Example 3</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#4">Example 4</a></li>
    </ul>
  </li>
  <li class="menu__item">
    <a  class="menu__link" href="#menu-2">Menu 2</a>
    <ul class="submenu" id="menu-2" tabindex="-1">
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#1">Example 1</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#2">Example 2</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#3">Example 3</a></li>
      <li class="submenu__item"><a class="submenu__link" href="http://example.com/#4">Example 4</a></li>
    </ul>
  </li>
</ul>
lorem ipsum <a href="http://example.com/">dolor</a> sit amet.


WAI-ARIA Roles and Other Accessibility Support

This answer hopefully covers the basics of accessible keyboard and mouse support for this feature, but as it's already quite sizable I'm going to avoid any discussion of WAI-ARIA roles and attributes, however I highly recommend that implementers refer to the spec for details on what roles they should use and any other appropriate attributes.

4
  • 47
    This is the most complete answer, with explanations and accessibility in mind. I think this should be the accepted answer since most of the other answers only handle click and are just code snippet dropped without any explanations.
    – Cyrille
    Oct 29, 2016 at 14:39
  • You don't actually want to bind click handlers. You can bind click handlers and also handle cases where users doesn't have a mouse. It doesn't hurt accessibility, it only adds functionality to users with a mouse. Adding functionality to one group of users doesn't hurt the users who can't use that functionality. You can provide more than one way of closing a diablog This is actually a pretty common logical fallacy. It's totally fine to give a feature to one group of users even when others don't benefit. I agree that all users should be able to have a good experience though
    – ICW
    Oct 13, 2021 at 20:56
  • 1
    @ICW, by using blur or focusout handlers, you will still fully support mouse and touch users, and it has the added benefit of supporting keyboard users. At no point did I suggest that you ought to not support mouse users.
    – zzzzBov
    Oct 13, 2021 at 21:08
  • 1
    It would be very helpful to see what this looks like in vanilla JS. I know the question is in JQuery, but 14 years have passed, and JQuery answers dominate SO so much that it's hard to learn the up-to-date solution.
    – Merchako
    Feb 15, 2023 at 23:54
171

The other solutions here didn't work for me so I had to use:

if(!$(event.target).is('#foo'))
{
    // hide menu
}

Edit: Plain Javascript variant (2021-03-31)

I used this method to handle closing a drop down menu when clicking outside of it.

First, I created a custom class name for all the elements of the component. This class name will be added to all elements that make up the menu widget.

const className = `dropdown-${Date.now()}-${Math.random() * 100}`;

I create a function to check for clicks and the class name of the clicked element. If clicked element does not contain the custom class name I generated above, it should set the show flag to false and the menu will close.

const onClickOutside = (e) => {
  if (!e.target.className.includes(className)) {
    show = false;
  }
};

Then I attached the click handler to the window object.

// add when widget loads
window.addEventListener("click", onClickOutside);

... and finally some housekeeping

// remove listener when destroying the widget
window.removeEventListener("click", onClickOutside);
1
  • 47
    This worked for me, except I added && !$(event.target).parents("#foo").is("#foo") inside the IF statement so that any child elements won't close the menu when clicked.
    – honyovk
    Sep 26, 2012 at 19:57
153

It's 2020 and you can use event.composedPath()

From: Event.composedPath()

The composedPath() method of the Event interface returns the event’s path, which is an array of the objects on which listeners will be invoked.

const target = document.querySelector('#myTarget')

document.addEventListener('click', (event) => {
  const withinBoundaries = event.composedPath().includes(target)

  if (withinBoundaries) {
    target.innerText = 'Click happened inside element'
  } else {
    target.innerText = 'Click happened **OUTSIDE** element'
  }
})
/* Just to make it good looking. You don't need this */
#myTarget {
  margin: 50px auto;
  width: 500px;
  height: 500px;
  background: gray;
  border: 10px solid black;
}
<div id="myTarget">
  Click me (or not!)
</div>

2
  • So many answers, but this is by far the best one in 2023 still. ty (Yes, it doesn't cover all scenarios but it's straight forward and modern. Jun 16, 2023 at 13:44
  • Best solution and more accurate than if (el === event.target || el.contains(event.target)) ... Aug 25, 2023 at 6:29
135

I have an application that works similarly to Eran's example, except I attach the click event to the body when I open the menu... Kinda like this:

$('#menucontainer').click(function(event) {
  $('html').one('click',function() {
    // Hide the menus
  });

  event.stopPropagation();
});

More information on jQuery's one() function

1
  • 10
    but then if you click on the menu itself, then outside, it won't work :)
    – vsync
    Aug 17, 2009 at 16:46
60

After research, I have found three working solutions

First solution

<script>
    //The good thing about this solution is it doesn't stop event propagation.

    var clickFlag = 0;
    $('body').on('click', function () {
        if(clickFlag == 0) {
            console.log('hide element here');
            /* Hide element here */
        }
        else {
            clickFlag=0;
        }
    });
    $('body').on('click','#testDiv', function (event) {
        clickFlag = 1;
        console.log('showed the element');
        /* Show the element */
    });
</script>

Second solution

<script>
    $('body').on('click', function(e) {
        if($(e.target).closest('#testDiv').length == 0) {
           /* Hide dropdown here */
        }
    });
</script>

Third solution

<script>
    var specifiedElement = document.getElementById('testDiv');
    document.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
        var isClickInside = specifiedElement.contains(event.target);
        if (isClickInside) {
          console.log('You clicked inside')
        }
        else {
          console.log('You clicked outside')
        }
    });
</script>
3
  • 13
    The third solution is by far the most elegant way of checking. It also doesn't involve any overhead of jQuery. Very nice. It helped a lot. Thanks.
    – dbarth
    Jul 27, 2016 at 14:49
  • Re "I forgot the page links for reference": I haven't seen that excuse from plagiarisers before. Jan 22, 2023 at 18:41
  • @PeterMortensen I don't get it. what is there to plagiarise here? I didn't post a blog post or ditto code here to plagiarize... Anyways, for your pleasure, I have removed that line :) Jan 23, 2023 at 15:16
43
$("#menuscontainer").click(function() {
    $(this).focus();
});
$("#menuscontainer").blur(function(){
    $(this).hide();
});

Works for me just fine.

1
  • 1
    If trying to use this with a custom built select and options menu, blur will trigger before click so nothing will get selected Nov 16, 2021 at 3:18
39

Now there is a plugin for that: outside events (blog post)

The following happens when a clickoutside handler (WLOG) is bound to an element:

  • the element is added to an array which holds all elements with clickoutside handlers
  • a (namespaced) click handler is bound to the document (if not already there)
  • on any click in the document, the clickoutside event is triggered for those elements in that array that are not equal to or a parent of the click-events target
  • additionally, the event.target for the clickoutside event is set to the element the user clicked on (so you even know what the user clicked, not just that he clicked outside)

So no events are stopped from propagation and additional click handlers may be used "above" the element with the outside-handler.

0
33

This worked for me perfectly!!

$('html').click(function (e) {
    if (e.target.id == 'YOUR-DIV-ID') {
        //do something
    } else {
        //do something
    }
});
0
28

I don't think what you really need is to close the menu when the user clicks outside; what you need is for the menu to close when the user clicks anywhere at all on the page. If you click on the menu, or off the menu it should close right?

Finding no satisfactory answers above prompted me to write this blog post the other day. For the more pedantic, there are a number of gotchas to take note of:

  1. If you attach a click event handler to the body element at click time be sure to wait for the 2nd click before closing the menu, and unbinding the event. Otherwise the click event that opened the menu will bubble up to the listener that has to close the menu.
  2. If you use event.stopPropogation() on a click event, no other elements in your page can have a click-anywhere-to-close feature.
  3. Attaching a click event handler to the body element indefinitely is not a performant solution
  4. Comparing the target of the event, and its parents to the handler's creator assumes that what you want is to close the menu when you click off it, when what you really want is to close it when you click anywhere on the page.
  5. Listening for events on the body element will make your code more brittle. Styling as innocent as this would break it: body { margin-left:auto; margin-right: auto; width:960px;}
1
  • 3
    "If you click on the menu, or off the menu it should close right?" not always. Cancelling a click by dragging off an element will still trigger a document level click, but the intent would not be to continue closing the menu. There are also plenty of other types of dialogs that could use the "click-out" behavior that would allow for clicking internally.
    – zzzzBov
    Jul 11, 2016 at 23:18
27

As another poster said there are a lot of gotchas, especially if the element you are displaying (in this case a menu) has interactive elements. I've found the following method to be fairly robust:

$('#menuscontainer').click(function(event) {
    //your code that shows the menus fully

    //now set up an event listener so that clicking anywhere outside will close the menu
    $('html').click(function(event) {
        //check up the tree of the click target to check whether user has clicked outside of menu
        if ($(event.target).parents('#menuscontainer').length==0) {
            // your code to hide menu

            //this event listener has done its job so we can unbind it.
            $(this).unbind(event);
        }

    })
});
0
27

A simple solution for the situation is:

$(document).mouseup(function (e)
{
    var container = $("YOUR SELECTOR"); // Give you class or ID
    
    if (!container.is(e.target) &&            // If the target of the click is not the desired div or section
        container.has(e.target).length === 0) // ... nor a descendant-child of the container
    {
        container.hide();
    }
});

The above script will hide the div if outside of the div click event is triggered.

0
25

There is also the focusout event:

var button = document.getElementById('button');
button.addEventListener('click', function(e){
  e.target.style.backgroundColor = 'green';
});
button.addEventListener('focusout', function(e){
  e.target.style.backgroundColor = '';
});
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
  <meta charset="utf-8">
</head>
<body>
  <button id="button">Click</button>
</body>
</html>

1
  • This example doesn't work in Safari, and I get the feeling that I should be learning something from that.
    – Merchako
    Feb 15, 2023 at 23:51
24

Check the window click event target (it should propagate to the window, as long as it's not captured anywhere else), and ensure that it's not any of the menu elements. If it's not, then you're outside your menu.

Or check the position of the click, and see if it's contained within the menu area.

0
23

Solution1

Instead of using event.stopPropagation() which can have some side affects, just define a simple flag variable and add one if condition. I tested this and worked properly without any side affects of stopPropagation:

var flag = "1";
$('#menucontainer').click(function(event){
    flag = "0"; // flag 0 means click happened in the area where we should not do any action
});

$('html').click(function() {
    if(flag != "0"){
        // Hide the menus if visible
    }
    else {
        flag = "1";
    }
});

Solution2

With just a simple if condition:

$(document).on('click', function(event){
    var container = $("#menucontainer");
    if (!container.is(event.target) &&            // If the target of the click isn't the container...
        container.has(event.target).length === 0) // ... nor a descendant of the container
    {
        // Do whatever you want to do when click is outside the element
    }
});
2
  • I used this solution with a boolean flag and it's good also with a articulated DOm and also if inside #menucontainer there are a lot of other elements
    – Migio B
    Feb 28, 2015 at 20:28
  • Solution 1 works better, because it handles cases when click target is removed from DOM by the time event propagates to the document.
    – Alice
    Feb 18, 2020 at 14:23
22

2020 solution using native JS API closest method.

document.addEventListener('click', ({ target }) => {
  if (!target.closest('#menupop')) {
    document.querySelector('#menupop').style.display = 'none'
  }
})
#menupop {
    width: 300px;
    height: 300px;
    background-color: red;
}
<div id="menupop">
clicking outside will close this
</div>

1
  • How does this work sorry? I'm not sure what '.el1' etc are referencing here. Jun 28, 2022 at 1:32
19

I've had success with something like this:

var $menuscontainer = ...;

$('#trigger').click(function() {
  $menuscontainer.show();

  $('body').click(function(event) {
    var $target = $(event.target);

    if ($target.parents('#menuscontainer').length == 0) {
      $menuscontainer.hide();
    }
  });
});

The logic is: when #menuscontainer is shown, bind a click handler to the body that hides #menuscontainer only if the target (of the click) isn't a child of it.

0
17

Use focusout for accessibility

There is one answer here that says (quite correctly) that focusing on click events is an accessibility problem since we want to cater for keyboard users. The focusout event is the correct thing to use here, but it can be done much more simply than in the other answer (and in pure JavaScript too):

A simpler way of doing it:

The 'problem' with using focusout is that if an element inside your dialog/modal/menu loses focus, to something also 'inside', the event will still get fired. We can check that this isn't the case by looking at event.relatedTarget (which tells us what element will have gained focus).

dialog = document.getElementById("dialogElement")

dialog.addEventListener("focusout", function (event) {
    if (
        // We are still inside the dialog so don't close
        dialog.contains(event.relatedTarget) ||
        // We have switched to another tab so probably don't want to close
        !document.hasFocus()
    ) {
        return;
    }
    dialog.close();  // Or whatever logic you want to use to close
});

There is one slight gotcha to the above, which is that relatedTarget may be null. This is fine if the user is clicking outside the dialog, but will be a problem if unless the user clicks inside the dialog and the dialog happens to not be focusable. To fix this you have to make sure to set tabIndex=0 so your dialog is focusable.

4
  • This is the best solution so far, since it takes accessibility into account. May 11, 2021 at 17:42
  • ... or `tabIndex="-1" so it is not inserted in the tabbing sequence
    – Juan Lanus
    Mar 11, 2022 at 14:45
  • Note: you can't use this for non-focusable elements
    – catwith
    Jun 28, 2022 at 23:19
  • I saw this answer after I figured out the solution myself. The other solutions that bind an event to document/window/body have an issue: if an element catches the event with stop propagate, the listener won't be executed.
    – Tuan Chau
    May 7, 2023 at 12:51
17

The event has a property called event.path of the element which is a "static ordered list of all its ancestors in tree order". To check if an event originated from a specific DOM element or one of its children, just check the path for that specific DOM element. It can also be used to check multiple elements by logically ORing the element check in the some function.

$("body").click(function() {
  target = document.getElementById("main");
  flag = event.path.some(function(el, i, arr) {
    return (el == target)
  })
  if (flag) {
    console.log("Inside")
  } else {
    console.log("Outside")
  }
});
#main {
  display: inline-block;
  background: yellow;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="main">
  <ul>
    <li>Test-Main</li>
    <li>Test-Main</li>
    <li>Test-Main</li>
    <li>Test-Main</li>
    <li>Test-Main</li>
  </ul>
</div>
<div id="main2">
  Outside Main
</div>

So for your case it should be

$("body").click(function() {
  target = $("#menuscontainer")[0];
  flag = event.path.some(function(el, i, arr) {
    return (el == target)
  });
  if (!flag) {
    // Hide the menus
  }
});
0
16

As a variant:

var $menu = $('#menucontainer');
$(document).on('click', function (e) {

    // If element is opened and click target is outside it, hide it
    if ($menu.is(':visible') && !$menu.is(e.target) && !$menu.has(e.target).length) {
        $menu.hide();
    }
});

It has no problem with stopping event propagation and better supports multiple menus on the same page where clicking on a second menu while a first is open will leave the first open in the stopPropagation solution.

14

I found this method in some jQuery calendar plugin.

function ClickOutsideCheck(e)
{
  var el = e.target;
  var popup = $('.popup:visible')[0];
  if (popup==undefined)
    return true;

  while (true){
    if (el == popup ) {
      return true;
    } else if (el == document) {
      $(".popup").hide();
      return false;
    } else {
      el = $(el).parent()[0];
    }
  }
};

$(document).bind('mousedown.popup', ClickOutsideCheck);
0
13

Here is the vanilla JavaScript solution for future viewers.

Upon clicking any element within the document, if the clicked element's id is toggled, or the hidden element is not hidden and the hidden element does not contain the clicked element, toggle the element.

(function () {
    "use strict";
    var hidden = document.getElementById('hidden');
    document.addEventListener('click', function (e) {
        if (e.target.id == 'toggle' || (hidden.style.display != 'none' && !hidden.contains(e.target))) hidden.style.display = hidden.style.display == 'none' ? 'block' : 'none';
    }, false);
})();

(function () {
    "use strict";
    var hidden = document.getElementById('hidden');
    document.addEventListener('click', function (e) {
        if (e.target.id == 'toggle' || (hidden.style.display != 'none' && !hidden.contains(e.target))) hidden.style.display = hidden.style.display == 'none' ? 'block' : 'none';
    }, false);
})();
<a href="javascript:void(0)" id="toggle">Toggle Hidden Div</a>
<div id="hidden" style="display: none;">This content is normally hidden. click anywhere other than this content to make me disappear</div>

If you are going to have multiple toggles on the same page you can use something like this:

  1. Add the class name hidden to the collapsible item.
  2. Upon document click, close all hidden elements which do not contain the clicked element and are not hidden
  3. If the clicked element is a toggle, toggle the specified element.

(function () {
    "use strict";
    var hiddenItems = document.getElementsByClassName('hidden'), hidden;
    document.addEventListener('click', function (e) {
        for (var i = 0; hidden = hiddenItems[i]; i++) {
            if (!hidden.contains(e.target) && hidden.style.display != 'none')
                hidden.style.display = 'none';
        }
        if (e.target.getAttribute('data-toggle')) {
            var toggle = document.querySelector(e.target.getAttribute('data-toggle'));
            toggle.style.display = toggle.style.display == 'none' ? 'block' : 'none';
        }
    }, false);
})();
<a href="javascript:void(0)" data-toggle="#hidden1">Toggle Hidden Div</a>
<div class="hidden" id="hidden1" style="display: none;" data-hidden="true">This content is normally hidden</div>
<a href="javascript:void(0)" data-toggle="#hidden2">Toggle Hidden Div</a>
<div class="hidden" id="hidden2" style="display: none;" data-hidden="true">This content is normally hidden</div>
<a href="javascript:void(0)" data-toggle="#hidden3">Toggle Hidden Div</a>
<div class="hidden" id="hidden3" style="display: none;" data-hidden="true">This content is normally hidden</div>

8

Instead using flow interruption, blur/focus event or any other tricky technics, simply match event flow with element's kinship:

$(document).on("click.menu-outside", function(event){
    // Test if target and it's parent aren't #menuscontainer
    // That means the click event occur on other branch of document tree
    if(!$(event.target).parents().andSelf().is("#menuscontainer")){
        // Click outisde #menuscontainer
        // Hide the menus (but test if menus aren't already hidden)
    }
});

To remove click outside event listener, simply:

$(document).off("click.menu-outside");
0
8

If you are scripting for IE and FF 3.* and you just want to know if the click occured within a certain box area, you could also use something like:

this.outsideElementClick = function(objEvent, objElement) {
  var objCurrentElement = objEvent.target || objEvent.srcElement;
  var blnInsideX = false;
  var blnInsideY = false;

  if (objCurrentElement.getBoundingClientRect().left >= objElement.getBoundingClientRect().left && objCurrentElement.getBoundingClientRect().right <= objElement.getBoundingClientRect().right)
    blnInsideX = true;

  if (objCurrentElement.getBoundingClientRect().top >= objElement.getBoundingClientRect().top && objCurrentElement.getBoundingClientRect().bottom <= objElement.getBoundingClientRect().bottom)
    blnInsideY = true;

  if (blnInsideX && blnInsideY)
    return false;
  else
    return true;
}

8

If someone is curious, here is a JavaScript solution (ES6):

window.addEventListener('mouseup', e => {
    if (e.target != yourDiv && e.target.parentNode != yourDiv) {
        yourDiv.classList.remove('show-menu');
        // Or yourDiv.style.display = 'none';
    }
})

And ES5, just in case:

window.addEventListener('mouseup', function (e) {
    if (e.target != yourDiv && e.target.parentNode != yourDiv) {
        yourDiv.classList.remove('show-menu');
        // Or yourDiv.style.display = 'none';
    }
});
7

Use:

var go = false;
$(document).click(function(){
    if(go){
        $('#divID').hide();
        go = false;
    }
})

$("#divID").mouseover(function(){
    go = false;
});

$("#divID").mouseout(function (){
    go = true;
});

$("btnID").click( function(){
    if($("#divID:visible").length==1)
        $("#divID").hide(); // Toggle
    $("#divID").show();
});
6

Hook a click event listener on the document. Inside the event listener, you can look at the event object, in particular, the event.target to see what element was clicked:

$(document).click(function(e){
    if ($(e.target).closest("#menuscontainer").length == 0) {
        // .closest can help you determine if the element 
        // or one of its ancestors is #menuscontainer
        console.log("hide");
    }
});
6

Here is a simple solution by pure javascript. It is up-to-date with ES6:

var isMenuClick = false;
var menu = document.getElementById('menuscontainer');
document.addEventListener('click',()=>{
    if(!isMenuClick){
       //Hide the menu here
    }
    //Reset isMenuClick 
    isMenuClick = false;
})
menu.addEventListener('click',()=>{
    isMenuClick = true;
})
3
  • "Up-to-date with ES6" is a pretty bold claim, when the only thing up-to-date with ES6 is doing () => {} instead of function() {}. What you have there is classified as plain JavaScript with a twist of ES6. Nov 17, 2017 at 12:41
  • @MortenMoulder: Ya. It's just for attention even though it is actually ES6. But just look at the solution. I think it is good.
    – Duannx
    Nov 18, 2017 at 2:40
  • It's vanilla JS and works for event target removed from DOM (e.g. when value from inner popup is selected, immediately closing the popup). +1 from me!
    – Alice
    Feb 18, 2020 at 14:29
6

I have used the below script done with jQuery.

jQuery(document).click(function(e) {
    var target = e.target; // Target div recorded
    if (!jQuery(target).is('#tobehide') ) {
        jQuery(this).fadeOut(); // If the click element is not the above id, it will hide
    }
})

Below find the HTML code:

<div class="main-container">
    <div>Hello, I am the title</div>
    <div class="tobehide">I will hide when you click outside of me</div>
</div>

You can read the tutorial here.

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