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Before you read this please get up this website to see what I am trying to do:

https://www.kris-willis.com

As you can see there is a RED arrow located below the menu and what it is that I'm trying to achieve is... when I hover over a menu button the arrow moves to the same button I'm hovering over without reloading the page.

Ideally I'd like the arrow to move back to a default button.. and also for the default button to change if clicked on a different menu button.

If you know any links to examples etc... I would really appreciate it!

Thank you for your time,

Kerry x

6
  • SSL error on the link...
    – Mark Meyer
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:40
  • @NuclearGhost It will work if you just type the link into your browser :)
    – Kerry
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:42
  • @Snuffleupagus I have tried building it from scratch using javascript but I keep failing so was wondering if there are similar things out there that I can learn off.
    – Kerry
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:43
  • Don't use table for menu. Also, see this.
    – Vucko
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:48
  • Do you want the arrow to /move/ to the button or /jump/ to the button?
    – user1720624
    Dec 28, 2012 at 16:11

5 Answers 5

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The first thing is that you have a wrong DOCTYPE.

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "">

This causes you page to load in quirk mode. Change it to

<!DOCTYPE html>

for HTML5 or use the complete one including the FSI & FPI.

Second is you are using a <table> for navigation. Nothing seriously wrong with it but people tend to use ul

For the :hover, you can simply use

#MenuPosition table tbody tr td:hover
{
background-image: url("/images/Arrow.jpg");
}

You might have to play with paddings and margins or maybe use display: block or display: inline-block to position the arrow correctly.

1
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Make the "buttons" anchors. Using css set create a rule for :hover to set a background image that contains the arrow.

There are plenty of CSS tutorials out there, Nettuts and Webdesigntuts have a lot of navigation articles. Or if you are comfortable with emulating others, find a site you like and pick apart the source until you figure out how they did it.

Keep in mind that javascript is not at all necessary to accomplish what you are doing. Unless you want some animations, and even then CSS can handle most of that work, pure CSS in my opinion is the better approach.

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PURE CSS SOLUTION

Check this answer.

Is there any way to hover over one element and affect a different element?

So it might be:

#thething {
    margin: 0;
}
.classone:hover + #thething {
    margin-top: 10px;
    margin-left: 10px;
}

If they're adjacent siblings in a parent div.

0

Just move the arrow bymargin-left with respect to left of the td DEMO

$("#Arrow").css({"margin-left":$(this).position().left+($(this).width()/2)-2});

Tp do this Add jQuery libirary to the head section of your page

<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js"></script>

Add this code in a external js file and add it to head section of your page

$(function(){
  $("#MenuPosition").on("hover","td",function(){
    $("#Arrow").css({"margin-left":$(this).position().left+($(this).width()/2)-2});

  });

});

EDIT : For restoring the arrow orignal position use

$(function(){
  currentPos = $("#Arrow").css("margin-left");

  $("#MenuPosition").on("hover","td",function(){
    $("#Arrow").css({"margin-left":$(this).position().left});

  });


   $("#MenuPosition").on("mouseout","td",function(){

     $("#Arrow").css({"margin-left":currentPos});        
  });

});

NOTE : PLEASE SEE THE CALCULATION PART AND CORRECT IT.

PS: cant correct is because its my log out time from office ;) . but i thing you got the logic to do it

1
  • Is there a way of setting a default button for the arrow to move back to once the mouse is off the button ?
    – Kerry
    Dec 28, 2012 at 17:19
0

You can do something like this:

Using a span to add the bg arrow below the nav/menu lis in the HTML:

<ul class="nav">
    <li>
        <a href="#">Menu 1</a>
        <span class="arrow">&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>
    </li>
    <li>
        <a href="#">Menu 2</a>
        <span class="arrow">&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>
    </li>
</ul>

The CSS:

.nav {
    font-size: anypx;
    list-style: none outside none;
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
    position: relative;
}

.nav li {
    background: #whatev;
    display: block;
    float: left;
    height: anypx;
    line-height: anypx;
    padding: 0;
    text-align: center;
}

.nav li a {
    color: #any;
    display: block;
    padding: any;
    position: relative;
    text-decoration: none;
    width: auto;
}
.arrow {
    background: url("images/arrow.png") no-repeat scroll 0 9px transparent;
    display: none;
    height: anypx;
    text-indent: -9999px;
    width: whatevs;
    z-index: 9999;
}

And Finally the JS/Jquery that makes it work:

$(document).ready(function(){     
    Your_menu();
});

function Your_menu(){

    $(".nav li").hover(function(){
            $(this).find('.arrow').css({visibility: "visible",display: "none"}).show();
        },function(){
            $(this).find('.arrow').css({visibility: "hidden"});
    });

}   

Here is a site that is showing this :)

http://www.drexelmedicine.org/

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