1

I want to bind handlers for mouseenter and mouseleave to a set of elements grabbed using the jQuery selector. The function needs to act on the children of the elements.

Here is my code:

$(document).ready(function(){
    $(".topnav-link").bind("mouseenter mouseleave", function() {
        $(this).children(".topnav").toggle();
    });
});

and in the body of the html:

<ul id="nav">
    <li>
        <a class="topnav-link" href="some-url">
            <img class="topnav" src="nav-about-us.png" />
            <img class="topnav hidden" src="/images/site/nav-about-us-on.png" />
        </a>
    </li>
    <li>
        <a class="topnav-link" href="some-url'}">
            <img class="topnav" src="nav-products.png" />
            <img class="topnav hidden" src="/images/site/nav-products-on.png" />
        </a>
    </li>
    <li>
        <a class="topnav-link" href="some-url">
            <img class="topnav" src="nav-contact.png" />
            <img class="topnav hidden" src="/images/site/nav-contact-on.png" />
        </a>
    </li>
</ul>

This actually works fine on Mac/Win/FF/Safari, but on IE6 and IE8, only the first element grabbed by the $(".topnav-link") selector displays the desired behavior.

Thanks for any help as to what I'm missing!

3
  • Can you do something simple like just alert('event fired'); inside the bind function, and see if your non-first elements fire the event? Oct 21, 2009 at 19:50
  • unless I misunderstand your desired behavior, your above example works fine for me in IE8: jsbin.com/axuve/edit#output
    – Matt
    Oct 21, 2009 at 20:25
  • Thanks for taking a look and commenting, both of you. Matt, after seeing your jsbin example, I realized I had to hunt elsewhere as to why my behaviors weren't being displayed. I feel silly, but it turns out that the fix I was using for my PNGs, was incompletely applied to all but the ones in the first link, and that had an effect on them not toggling correctly. Thanks again.
    – akc
    Oct 21, 2009 at 20:48

1 Answer 1

1

You should use CSS to achieve the desired roll-over effects.

Please read CSS Technique: Fast Rollovers Without Preload for more information.

1
  • Aware of that technique, but... The design requirement was for clickable nav items in a non-web font (so must be image or SIFR), transparent against a variable background, that changed on hover, all compatible with IE6. The CSS technique you mention is an obvious choice for simpler scenarios where you would have text in the A tag. In my case, the text had to be part of the image, so using the CSS technique would leave the A tag empty. Thanks for mentioning it, though. It may be helpful to others who come across this thread looking for a clean, simple hover effect.
    – akc
    Oct 30, 2009 at 16:32

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