9

I've an element that can be dragged using native HTML5. It has dragstart, drag, and dragend event listeners assigned to it. In addition, I also have keydown and keyup event listeners assigned to document.body element.

When dragging the draggable element, ondrag event will fire as expected. When I press & release any key while not dragging anything, document.body keydown/up events will fire.

However, if I keydown/up while performing ondrag, the document.body keydown/up event will not fire. Is there any workaround/hack to this?

5
  • Can you provide an example / fiddle?
    – Rob W
    Nov 12, 2011 at 21:51
  • Here you go: jsfiddle.net/SVArR
    – woran
    Nov 12, 2011 at 22:26
  • I tried hard, but in webkit browsers, I cannot use key events during a normal drag event. Even without binding these events, the key events aren't registered.
    – Rob W
    Nov 12, 2011 at 22:52
  • It's probably a browser bug/feature.
    – woran
    Nov 13, 2011 at 14:22
  • I don't see the spec saying that keyboard presses should be blocked. I do see that this is the behavior though. What a lame surprise :) Why has this been like this for years? It's terrible!
    – SimplGy
    Jul 2, 2014 at 22:24

1 Answer 1

5

Answering my own questions... From Drag Operations - MDN:

With the dragenter and dragover event, the dropEffect property is initialized to the effect that the user is requesting. The user can modify the desired effect by pressing modifier keys. Although the exact keys used vary by platform, typically the Shift and Control keys would be used to switch between copying, moving and linking.

On HTML5 native drag, the only key press that can trigger anything is the modifier keys. On Mac, it's the option key and the control key. Action is captured via event.dataTransfer.effectAllowed, not keypress or keydown events.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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