I am trying to hide specific legend items on my graph (http://api.highcharts.com/highcharts/legend). If I loop through the chart.legend.allItems and try to change a specific items visible property it does not effect the legend at all.
$.each(chart.legend.allItems, function() {
this.visible = false;
});
How can I hide a specific legend item on my graph ?
I think this is being made out to be more complex than it needs to be.
You can set showInLegend to false in your config options for the series.
If you need to do it programmatically, you can use series.update() to accomplish it dynamically.
Reference:
http://api.highcharts.com/highcharts/plotOptions.series.showInLegend
http://api.highcharts.com/highcharts/Series.update
I found other solution in this question
var item = chart.series[1];
//hide serie in the graph
item.hide();
item.options.showInLegend = false;
item.legendItem = null;
chart.legend.destroyItem(item);
chart.legend.render();
EDIT:
Other solution for last version of highcharts:
$('#container').highcharts().series[1].update({ showInLegend: false });
You can do that with the load event - Highcharts Doc
chart: {
events: {
load: function() {
var myChart = this;
$.each(myChart.series, function(index, serie) {
if(index === 2 ) { // hide serie
serie.hide();
}
});
}
}
},
Here a fiddle
if you want to hide some labels you can add some css class to hide them according to some special feature of the series. I pass an example in which the series is hidden with empty data and also hide the label:
for (var i = 0; i < chart.series.length; i++) {
if (chart.series[i].dataMax === 0) {
chart.series[i].hide();
}
}
$("#charContent").find('.highcharts-legend-item-hidden').each(function () {
$(this).addClass('hidden');
});
In the css:
.highcharts-legend-item-hidden.hidden {
display: none;
}
Maybe it's not a very clean solution but it works for me
2 markers at the same position how not display the tooltip of the hidden marker? When I pass over the visible markers.
map.on('pointermove', function(e) {
var feature = map.forEachFeatureAtPixel(e.pixel, function(feature, layer) {
if (layer == layer_1) {
return feature;
}
});
map.getTarget().style.cursor = feature ? 'pointer' : '';
tooltip.style.display = feature ? '' : 'none';
if (feature){
overlay.setPosition(e.coordinate);
tooltip.innerHTML = 'marker hidden';
}
});
Can't just comment or I would since I only want to ask you: did you try using setStyle() instead to change the style? That usually forces the change event. I'm asking that because I had a similar issue here to hide/show features.
I know I'm missing something very basic, but when using jQuery in a situation where you have stacked "droppable" DIVs on top of each other (think nested boxes), how do you allow and accept an element drop on the top most DIV and then cancel the drag/drop event so it is not also sent to the other "droppable" DIVs below?
$('#'+objectID+" .task-droppable").droppable({
accept: function(d) {
if(d.hasClass("source-task")||d.hasClass("source-sequence")){ //sequences can contain both sequences and tasks
return true;
} //end if
}, //end accept
activeClass: "isDropDest",
//hoverClass: "isDragging",
//this is used for both drag/drop and item moves
drop: function(event, ui) {
var draggableId = ui.draggable.attr("id");
var droppableId = $(this).attr("id");
//var sender_id = ui.sender.attr('id');
//var receiver_id = $(this).attr('id');
//var item_id = ui.item.attr('id');
//var above_id = ui.item.prev().attr('id');
//var below_id = ui.item.next().attr('id');
//check if this is a drag/drop or a move by looking for the object class
if(!$('#'+draggableId).hasClass('object')) {
$('#'+draggableId).css('top', '0px');
$('#'+draggableId).css('left', '0px');
createObject(draggableId, droppableId);
} else {
//handle the move - do nothing
} //end if
event.stopPropagation();
} //end drop
}); //end droppable
Sorry, not enough coffee today.
Sounds like you may need to use the greedy option
By default, when an element is dropped on nested droppables, each
droppable will receive the element. However, by setting this option to
true, any parent droppables will not receive the element.
$( ".selector" ).droppable({ greedy: true });
Working Example
Is it possible to change top and left positions (get current values and change them) of jQuery UI datepicker. Please note that i need to change position, not set margin as it is in other examples.
Sure it is. As there's always only one datepicker active, you can select active datepicker with:
var $datepicker = $('#ui-datepicker-div');
and change its position:
$datepicker.css({
top: 10,
left: 10
});
EDIT
Whoah, tricky one. If you set top or left position in beforeShow, it gets overriden again by datepicker plugin. You have to put css changes in a setTimeout:
$("#datepicker").datepicker({
beforeShow: function (input, inst) {
setTimeout(function () {
inst.dpDiv.css({
top: 100,
left: 200
});
}, 0);
}
});
DEMO: http://jsfiddle.net/BWfwf/4/
Explanation about setTimeout(function () {}, 0): Why is setTimeout(fn, 0) sometimes useful?
If you get really stuck you can edit your jquery-ui-[version].custom.js. The function that controls the position where the calender will appear is:
_findPos: function(obj) {
var position,
inst = this._getInst(obj),
isRTL = this._get(inst, "isRTL");
while (obj && (obj.type === "hidden" || obj.nodeType !== 1 || $.expr.filters.hidden(obj))) {
obj = obj[isRTL ? "previousSibling" : "nextSibling"];
}
position = $(obj).offset();
return [position.left, position.top];
},
I have some custom code that uses a CSS3 transformation to zoom the page in or out based on its width. This throws out the screen coordinates that the calendar widget relies on. I added some custom code to the _findPos to detect and handle the zoom level. Modified code looks like this:
_findPos: function(obj) {
var position,
inst = this._getInst(obj),
isRTL = this._get(inst, "isRTL");
while (obj && (obj.type === "hidden" || obj.nodeType !== 1 || $.expr.filters.hidden(obj))) {
obj = obj[isRTL ? "previousSibling" : "nextSibling"];
}
position = $(obj).offset();
/* Custom Code for Zoom */
var zoomLevel = 1;
var minW = 1024;
if ($(window).width() > minW)
{ zoomLevel = $(window).width() / minW;}
return [position.left, position.top/zoomLevel];
},
May be an old question, but ran into the problem myself just today and could not get other suggestions to work. Fixed it alternatively (using .click(function(){}) and wanted to add my two cents.
I have an input field with the id sDate which, when clicked, displays the datepicker.
What I did to solve the problem was add a click routine to the #sDate field.
$('#sDate').click(function(){ //CHANGE sDate TO THE ID OF YOUR INPUT FIELD
var pTop = '10px'; //CHANGE TO WHATEVER VALUE YOU WANT FOR TOP POSITIONING
var pLeft = '10px'; //CHANGE TO WHATEVER VALUE YOU WANT FOR LEFT POSITIONING
$('#ui-datepicker-div').css({'left':pLeft, 'top':pTop});
});
your solution works provided you run it after calling the datepicker in the code, I tried calling it before but it didn't work, so I tried to understand how it worked for you.
I have adapted the datepicker in the context of an input field which is fixed at the top of the page to scroll. The datepicker was lost ...
Here is my example code for adaptation in a context of datepicker which becomes dynamically fixed:
Example found on w3schools.com: https://www.w3schools.com/howto/howto_js_sticky_header.asp
HTML:
<div class="padding-16 center" id="resa_nav">
<div style="margin: 24px 0 0;">
<label for="date_selector"
class="text-gray">Choose a date</label>
<input type="text" id="date_selector" name="date_selector" class="padding-small">
</div>
</div>
CSS:
.sticky {
position: fixed;
top: 0;
width: inherit;
background: white;
box-shadow: 0px 0px 7px 4px #69696969;
}
JS:
// init datepicker
$('#date_selector').datepicker();
// When the user scrolls the page, execute myFunction
window.onscroll = function() { myFunction() };
// Get the header
var header = document.getElementById('resa_nav');
// Get the offset position of the navbar
var sticky = header.offsetTop;
// Add the sticky class to the header when you reach its scroll position. Remove "sticky" when you leave the scroll position
function myFunction() {
if (window.pageYOffset > sticky) {
// set block sticky
header.classList.add('sticky');
// adjust datepicker position
// attach a namespace for unbind click later in "non-sticky" context
$('#date_selector').on('click.sticked', function(){
var top = '10px';
var left = '10px';
$('#ui-datepicker-div').css({'left': left, 'top': top});
});
}
else {
// remove sticky
header.classList.remove('sticky');
// unbind the second event 'click' for retrieve the
// default of settings in "non-sticky" context
$('#date_selector').off('click.sticked');
}
}
// END FUNCTION
hope to help!
just add css as below for datepicker
.datepicker {
top: -150px;
/* adjust value as per requirement. if not work try with addin !important*/
}
I understand that mobile safari has a lot of bugs around fixed elements, but for the most part I've managed to get my layout working correctly until I added a much needed text input to the fixed navigation at the bottom. Now when the user focuses on the text input element and the virtual keyboard appears, my navigation, which is otherwise always fixed at the bottom of the page, jumps up to a really strange spot in the middle of the page.
I'd add some of my code to this post, but I wouldn't be sure where to start. That navigation is fixed at the bottom and positioned to the left and bottom 0, and 100% width. From there, I don't know what's going on, I can only assume it's a mobile safari bug.
It also appears to lose it's position fixed and become relative, only while the text input element is focused on and the virtual keyboard is open.
http://dansajin.com/2012/12/07/fix-position-fixed/ this is one of the solutions proposed. Seems worth a shot.
In short: set fixed elements to position:absolute when any input is focused and reset them when that element is blurred
.header {
position: fixed;
}
.footer {
position: fixed;
}
.fixfixed .header,
.fixfixed .footer {
position: absolute;
}
and
if ('ontouchstart' in window) {
/* cache dom references */
var $body = $('body');
/* bind events */
$(document)
.on('focus', 'input', function() {
$body.addClass('fixfixed');
})
.on('blur', 'input', function() {
$body.removeClass('fixfixed');
});
}
The solutions on the top are some ways to go and fix the problem, but I think adding extra css class or using moderniz we are complicating things.If you want a more simple solution, here is a non-modernizr non-extra-css but pure jquery solution and work on every device and browsers I use this fix on all my projects
if ('ontouchstart' in window) {
$(document).on('focus', 'textarea,input,select', function() {
$('.navbar.navbar-fixed-top').css('position', 'absolute');
}).on('blur', 'textarea,input,select', function() {
$('.navbar.navbar-fixed-top').css('position', '');
});
}
I had a similar problem, but I found a workaround by adding the following css class to the body element on input focus and then removing it again on unfocus:
.u-oh {
overflow: hidden;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
position: fixed;
}
Taking from what sylowgreen did, the key is to fix the body on entering the input. Thus:
$("#myInput").on("focus", function () {
$("body").css("position", "fixed");
});
$("#myInput").on("blur", function () {
$("body").css("position", "static");
});
Add javascript like this:
$(function() {
var $body;
if ('ontouchstart' in window) {
$body = $("body");
document.addEventListener('focusin', function() {
return $body.addClass("fixfixed");
});
return document.addEventListener('focusout', function() {
$body.removeClass("fixfixed");
return setTimeout(function() {
return $(window).scrollLeft(0);
}, 20);
});
}
});
and add class like this:
.fixfixed header{
position: absolute;
}
you can reference this article: http://dansajin.com/2012/12/07/fix-position-fixed/
I really like the solution above. I packaged it up into a little jQuery plugin so I could:
Set which parent gets the class
Set which elements this applies to (don't forget "textarea" and "select").
Set what the parent class name is
Allow it to be chained
Allow it to be used multiple times
Code example:
$.fn.mobileFix = function (options) {
var $parent = $(this),
$fixedElements = $(options.fixedElements);
$(document)
.on('focus', options.inputElements, function(e) {
$parent.addClass(options.addClass);
})
.on('blur', options.inputElements, function(e) {
$parent.removeClass(options.addClass);
// Fix for some scenarios where you need to start scrolling
setTimeout(function() {
$(document).scrollTop($(document).scrollTop())
}, 1);
});
return this; // Allowing chaining
};
// Only on touch devices
if (Modernizr.touch) {
$("body").mobileFix({ // Pass parent to apply to
inputElements: "input,textarea,select", // Pass activation child elements
addClass: "fixfixed" // Pass class name
});
}
I use this jQuery script:
var focus = 0;
var yourInput = $(".yourInputClass");
yourInput.focusin(function(){
if(!focus) {
yourInput.blur();
$("html, body").scrollTop($(document).height());
focus = 1;
}
if(focus) {
yourInput.focus();
focus = 0;
}
});
Works perfectly for me.
The focusin and focusout events seem to be better suited to this problem than the focus and blur events since the former bubble up to the root element. See this answer on SO.
Personally I use AngularJS, so I implemented it like this:
$window.document.body.addEventListener('focusin', function(event) {
var element = event.target;
var tagName = element.tagName.toLowerCase();
if(!$rootScope.inputOverlay && (tagName === 'input' || tagName === 'textarea' || tagName === 'select')) {
$rootScope.$apply(function() {
$rootScope.inputOverlay = true;
});
}
});
$window.document.body.addEventListener('focusout', function() {
if($rootScope.inputOverlay) {
$rootScope.$apply(function() {
$rootScope.inputOverlay = false;
});
}
});
Note: I am conditionally running this script if this is mobile Safari.
I put an ng-class attribute on my navbar:
<div class="navbar navbar-default navbar-fixed-top" ng-class="{'navbar-absolute': inputOverlay}">
using the following CSS:
.navbar-absolute {
position: absolute !important;
}
You can read more about focusin here and focusout here.
Test this one. It works. I just test it.
$(document).on('focus','input', function() {
setTimeout(function() {
$('#footer1').css('position', 'absolute');
$('#header1').css('position', 'absolute');
}, 0);
});
$(document).on('blur','input', function() {
setTimeout(function() {
$('#footer1').css('position', 'fixed');
$('#header1').css('position', 'fixed');
}, 800);
});
None of these solutions worked for me because my DOM is complicated and I have dynamic infinite scroll pages, so I had to create my own.
Background: I am using a fixed header and an element further down that sticks below it once the user scrolls that far down. This element has a search input field. In addition, I have dynamic pages added during forward and backwards scroll.
Problem: In iOS, anytime the user clicked on the input in the fixed element, the browser would scroll all the way to the top of the page. This not only caused undesired behavior, it also triggered my dynamic page add at the top of the page.
Expected Solution: No scroll in iOS (none at all) when the user clicks on the input in the sticky element.
Solution:
/*Returns a function, that, as long as it continues to be invoked, will not
be triggered. The function will be called after it stops being called for
N milliseconds. If `immediate` is passed, trigger the function on the
leading edge, instead of the trailing.*/
function debounce(func, wait, immediate) {
var timeout;
return function () {
var context = this, args = arguments;
var later = function () {
timeout = null;
if (!immediate) func.apply(context, args);
};
var callNow = immediate && !timeout;
clearTimeout(timeout);
timeout = setTimeout(later, wait);
if (callNow) func.apply(context, args);
};
};
function is_iOS() {
var iDevices = [
'iPad Simulator',
'iPhone Simulator',
'iPod Simulator',
'iPad',
'iPhone',
'iPod'
];
while (iDevices.length) {
if (navigator.platform === iDevices.pop()) { return true; }
}
return false;
}
$(document).on("scrollstop", debounce(function () {
//console.log("Stopped scrolling!");
if (is_iOS()) {
var yScrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
if (yScrollPos > 200) { //200 here to offset my fixed header (50px) and top banner (150px)
$('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'absolute');
$('#searchBarDiv').css('top', yScrollPos + 50 + 'px'); //50 for fixed header
}
else {
$('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'inherit');
}
}
},250,true));
$(document).on("scrollstart", debounce(function () {
//console.log("Started scrolling!");
if (is_iOS()) {
var yScrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
if (yScrollPos > 200) { //200 here to offset my fixed header (50px) and top banner (150px)
$('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'fixed');
$('#searchBarDiv').css('width', '100%');
$('#searchBarDiv').css('top', '50px'); //50 for fixed header
}
}
},250,true));
Requirements: JQuery mobile is required for the startsroll and stopscroll functions to work.
Debounce is included to smooth out any lag created by the sticky element.
Tested in iOS10.
I wasn't having any luck with the solution proposed by Dan Sajin. Perhaps the bug has changed since he wrote that blog post, but on iOS 7.1, the bug will always surface when the position is changed back to fixed after the input is blurred, even if you delay until the software keyboard is hidden completely. The solution I came to involves waiting for a touchstart event rather than the blur event since the fixed element always snaps back into proper position when the page is scrolled.
if (Modernizr.touch) {
var $el, focused;
$el = $('body');
focused = false;
$(document).on('focus', 'input, textarea, select', function() {
focused = true;
$el.addClass('u-fixedFix');
}).on('touchstart', 'input, textarea, select', function() {
// always execute this function after the `focus` handler:
setTimeout(function() {
if (focused) {
return $el.removeClass('u-fixedFix');
}
}, 1);
});
}
HTH