1

I have 3 elements, that are all siblings, yet they are positioned over each other. I wanted to use mouseenter/mouseleave on these, however, they do not work as expected. (only the topmost element is firing the mouseenter/mouseleave). Is there a native jQuery method to deal with siblings elements? I would like to stay away from checking every element bound on every single mousemove event.

----------- OUTER ELEMENT --------------
|                                      |
|  -------  -------                    |
|  |  A  |  |  B  |                    |
|  -------  -------                    |
|                                      |
----------- OUTER ELEMENT --------------

defined as html:

<div class="outerelement"></div><!-- position absolute, etc -->
<div class="a"></div><!-- position absolute, etc -->
<div class="b"></div><!-- position absolute, etc -->

javascript:

$('div').on('mouseenter mouseleave', function(e) {
    switch (e.type) {
       case 'mouseenter':
         $(this).addClass('hover');
         break;
       case 'mouseleave':
         $(this).removeClass('hover');
         break;
    }
});

jsFiddle here

What ends up happening is mouseenter/leave fires when over A/B correctly, but it should fire for the outer element, however it is not ....

18
  • Works just fine for me in Chrome ?
    – adeneo
    Jun 15, 2013 at 18:46
  • 2
    I don't think you get it, placing the elements with CSS has nothing to do with the events or the order in the DOM, so just placing them on top of each other doesn't magically make the mouse events work the way you want them do, they work exactly the way they should do, you're just expecting something completely different, and that would require hackish solutions. Why don't you just place them inside each other in the DOM like normal people, solves the issue right away without any javascript -> jsfiddle.net/ranRf/5
    – adeneo
    Jun 15, 2013 at 19:11
  • 1
    Well, you are doing it wrong, as there is no such event, application or not. The order in the DOM is what counts, not what you see on your screen, it's that simple.
    – adeneo
    Jun 15, 2013 at 19:25
  • 1
    Exactly, they are all siblings, so when the mouse enters an element that is positioned on top of another element, the mouse leaves the underlying element and is no longer within that element, that's just how it works, has always worked, and probably always will work, as that is the most logical behaviour, anything else would not make any sense.
    – adeneo
    Jun 15, 2013 at 19:40
  • 1
    Exactly, and mouseleave fires when leaving an element, and when moving the cursor to a new element, that just so happens to be positioned over another element, fires the mouseleave event on the underlying element, and the mouseenter event on the top most element, just like you would expect, and just like you would need it to in 99.99% of all cases. The problem, again, is that you are expecting something else than what it really does, and you haven't really understood how the box model works.
    – adeneo
    Jun 15, 2013 at 21:17

1 Answer 1

0

tested with win-chrome only.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">

    * {
        box-sizing: border-box;
    }

    div.overlay div {
        position:       absolute;
        border:         1px solid rgba(0,0,0,0.25);
        height:         100px;
        z-index:        10;
    }

    div.overlay div.hover {
        background-color:   rgba(0,0,0,0.25);
    }

</style>
<script src="js/jquery-2.0.2.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    $(document).on('ready', function(e) {

        var body    = $(this); //.find('body');
        var proxy   = $(this).find('div.overlay');

        var numChildren = 50;
        while (--numChildren) {
            proxy.append(
                $('<div/>').css({
                    'top':  Math.random() * 800,
                    'width':    Math.random() * 800,
                    'height':   Math.random() * 800,
                    'left': Math.random() * 800
                })
            );
        }

        body.on('mousemove', function(e) {

            var children    = proxy.children();
        var x           = e.pageX - window.scrollX;
        var y           = e.pageY - window.scrollY;
            for (var i = 0; i < children.length; ++i) {
                var element = $(children[i]);
                var rect    = element[0].getBoundingClientRect();
                if (rect.contains(x, y)) {
                    if (!element.hasClass('hover')) {
                        element.addClass('hover');
                        element.triggerHandler('truemouseenter');
                    }
                } else {
                    if (element.hasClass('hover')) {
                        element.removeClass('hover');
                        element.triggerHandler('truemouseleave');
                    }
                }
            }
        });

        ClientRect.prototype.contains = function(x, y) {
            return (x >= this.left && x <= this.right && y >= this.top && y<= this.bottom);
        }

    });
</script>
</head>
<body>

    <div class="overlay"></div>

</body>
</html>

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