When a particular element is clicked, I want to call a function. When any of its children are clicked, I do not want to call the function.
I am not using jQuery.
Example:
I created a modal:
<div class="fullscreen-overlay">
<div class="card">
...
</div>
</div>
I want to call my closeModal()
function when ".fullscreen-overlay" is clicked, but not when ".card" or any of its content are clicked.
jsfiddle:
https://jsfiddle.net/5kuwmf9s/
Research:
I could've sworn there was a CSS attribute for this, but after Googling and searching on SO for it, I can't find it / might've been imagining it. "pointer-events" stops it on the target element, not bubbling.
Theres another answer that suggests attaching an event handler to ALL children that catches their events and stops propagation - which seems unnecessary. My children are dynamic, and this will get complicated to keep attaching handlers.
z-index
is your solution..card
is a part of of.fullscreen-overlay
, recall Venn's shapes. The only thing, I think, avialble is to make.fullscreen-overlay
in higher level of its children usingz-index
e.target
ande.currentTarget
?