I want to display:none
if user hovers my banner for 500ms, but the following JQuery code is not working. Where is mistake?
$('.banner').hover(function() {
setTimeout(function(){
$(this).css('display','none');
}, 500);
});
You can't pass $(this)
like that in an anonymous function. Set it to a variable instead
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var banner = $(this);
setTimeout(function() {
banner.css('display', 'none');
}, 500);
});
The this
inside your setTimeout
does not refer to the this
in the hover
function. You can cache the this
in your hover
function so that it can be used in the setTimeout
function:
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var $this = $(this);
setTimeout(function(){
$this.css('display','none');
}, 500);
});
Here is a demo: http://jsfiddle.net/hVejj/
Update
var timer;
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var $this = $(this);
timer = setTimeout(function(){
$this.css('display','none');
}, 500);
},
function () {
clearTimeout(timer);
});
Here is a demo for this update: http://jsfiddle.net/hVejj/1/
hoverIntent
and there is a plugin for it but my update is the basic idea.
If you want it to hide the banner when you've hovered over it for 500ms, then you need to save a reference to the DOM element being hidden. You probably also want to clear the timer if you've stopped hovering before the timeout fires. You'll need the signature that takes an in AND out handler separately. Store the timer handle and clear it when you stop hovering if it hasn't already expired.
var hoverTimer = null;
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var $banner = $(this);
hoverTimer = setTimeout(function(){
hoverTimer = null;
$banner.css('display','none');
}, 500);
}, function() {
if (hoverTimer) {
clearTimeout(hoverTimer);
}
hoverTimer = null;
});
You need to give the callback function access to the right this
variable:
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var temp = this;
setTimeout(function(){
temp.css('display','none');
}, 500);
});
The following code will hide the banner after the user hovers for more than 500 ms:
var timeout;
$('.banner').hover(
var banner = $(this);
// Hover In
function() {
timeout = setTimeout(function() { banner.hide(); }, 500);
},
// Hover Out
function() {
clearTimeout(timeout);
}
);
If you're trying to do what I think, something like this should make it work:
var tmp_abort
$('.banner').mouseenter(function() {
tmp_abort=setTimeout(function(){
$(this).css('display','none');
}, 500);
});
$('.banner').mouseleave(function(){
clearTimeout(tmp_abort)
});
`
.banner
twice, you can chain the calls: $('.banner').mouseenter().mouseleave();`. Welcome to stackoverflow too!
Try this:
$('.banner').hover(function() {
var me = $(this);
setTimeout(function(){
me.css('display','none');
}, 500);
});
The this variable changes meaning based on scope. Once inside the the function in the setTimeout() call this no longer refers to the .banner element.
So you need to "save" that reference so you can use in the function in the setTimeout() call.
this
inside the callback refers towindow
.