I am using
$('.show_hide').click(function(){
//$(".slidingDiv").slideToggle();
$('#slidingDiv').fadeOut('500');
});
but it collapse div very fast
this is my script:
<div class="search-form" id="search-form">
<div class="slidingDiv" id="slidingDiv">
Content goes here
</div>
<a class="show_hide" id="show_hide" style="display: inline;">Search slider</a>
</div>
When I click on bottom grey bar I want to toggle slidingDiv div Up/Down with slow/smooth effects.
I tried all codes but it toggle very fast though I set time delay also.
You can use integer values instead a string to represent the milliseconds.
Try:
$('.show_hide').click(function(){
//$(".slidingDiv").slideToggle();
$('#slidingDiv').fadeOut(1000);
});
higher the number, slower the effect.
Related
I currently have an element which contains both an input field and an overlay.
The overlay prevents the input field to get focus on dragging the parent.
HTML:
<div class="draggableObject ui-draggable"> // z-index 300
<div class="objectContent">
<input value="500"></input> // z-index 301
<div class="overlay"></div> // z-index 302
</div>
</div>
Javascript/jQuery:
$(".overlay").on('click touchstart', function(){
$(this).parent().find('input').focus();
});
$('draggableObject').on('drag', function(){
$(this).find('input').blur();
});
If I drag the element and release the mousebutton, it causes the overlay to trigger the click event. How can I prevent this from happening?
I tried preventDefault() and stopPropagation(), but niether of these seem to work properly. Or I might've misplaced them.
I'm working on a page with four (4) separate DIV elements that all are scrolled independently of each other. Using the answer here: `-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch` broken for initially offscreen elements in iOS7 I was able to get most of the pages working. There are still a few pages where the DIV holding the main content cannot be scrolled vertically when a side DIV is expanded.
The page structure looks like this:
...
<div id="paneTop">...</div>
<div id="paneLeft" class="expanded">...</div>
<div id="paneCenter">
<div>
<div style="overflow: hidden;">
<div id="mainContent" style="overflow: auto;">...</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="paneRight" class="expanded">...</div>
...
Setting the touchstart event listener on #paneCenter worked for most of the pages but those didn't have the extra layer of divs. I have tried setting the touchstart event listener on #mainContent and all the way up the chain but #mainContent will not scroll when #paneLeft is expanded even though it works when #paneLeft is collapsed and it works whether paneRight is expanded or not.
Note: this issue has only been identified on an iPad running iOS7.
This is the correct behavior. If you want it to scroll vertically but hide it horizontally, then target it specifically: overflow-x: hidden (to hide horizontal excess), and don't set anything to overflow-y. This allows for some good control over elements.
I'm suing jquery ui draggable on a list of items that can be dropped on a .droppable list of other items. Here's a jsFiddle to show what I'm trying to do:
<div id="container">
<div id="left-pane" class="pane">
<div class="item">Item A</div>
<div class="item">Item B</div>
<div class="item">Item C</div>
<div class="item">Item D</div>
</div>
<div id="right-pane" class="pane">
<div class="item">Item E</div>
<div class="item">Item F</div>
<div class="item">Item G</div>
<div class="item">Item H</div>
</div>
$('.item').draggable({
helper: 'clone',
appendTo: '#contentpane',
cursor: 'move'
});
$('.item').droppable();
The panes have a fixed height, and overflow-y: auto so that we can scroll inside to see hidden elements.
When dragging an element from a list to the other, the lists do not scroll since I use appendTo and the dragged item is not in the list. Is there a way to make the list 'scrollable' when I drag an item over? otherwise it is not possible to drop the item at the bottom of the list, let's say drop 'Item A' on 'Item H' on the fiddle example
Be able to use the scroll features from different container is really not easy to do.
I opended a topic on this subject. You will find an edit of the question with a functionnal workaround.
Check this related question : JqueryUI, drag elements into cells of a scrolling dropable div containing large table
About your last remark, you could place your item at the boom of the list using the sortable property. http://jqueryui.com/sortable/
Well the only way I found to do it is to detect the position of the dragged element and scroll the droppable container, with a smooth effect so that it will scroll like doing it from the mouse wheel.
I create modal dialog with form inside it (with some text input).
And I just can't enter the text inside the textbox. Dialog blocks keyboard input.
Here is my simplified example:
<div id="modal-dialog">
<label for="my-text">TRY to input text...</label>
<textarea id="my-text" style="position:relative; z-index:1"></textarea>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
var dialog = $('#modal-dialog').dialog({ modal: true });
</script>
Note: You may ask - why did I mentioned about "position:relative; z-index:1"? Because it works fine without it. But I can't remove it because of design.
Note: not modal dialog works fine too.
I'm using jQuery 1.6.2 + jQuery UI 1.8.14
The z-index is the problem. Here is an exemple ( http://jsfiddle.net/c3BPP/ ) of your code with a bigger z-index and it works.
You can also lower the z-index of the JQuery dialog:
var dialog = $('#modal-dialog').dialog({
modal: true,
zIndex: 500
});
By default, it is 1000. Of course your relative or absolute positioned elements needing text input need to be greater than the z-index of the dialog still.
I found that the <form> tag in my dialog was getting a z-index of 1, preventing any of the controls from working. Instead of changing the z-index for each control, simply changing the z-index of the <form> tag to 1010 (a value higher than the default of the dialog) worked for me.
Adding tabindex="-1" helped me resolve this problem.
Here's an example:
<div class="modal fade" tabindex="-1" id="error" role="dialog">
I'm using jQuery UI's tabs to divide content on my page. I have a 'link bar' I would like to have hang at the bottom of each tab. (The tab text will change but generally they will navigate the user left or right through tabs.)
Hosting the #linkBar div inside the first tab makes it 'look' right, inside Themeroller's border. Putting it just outside the 'parent tab' div places the links below the theme's border. I've tried creating a spacer div but it just pushes #linkBar down further.
Of course when the user switches to another tab, the link bar goes away. How is ownership of elements organized between tabs? Should I dynamically destroy the #linkBar div on the tab being navigated away from and rebuild it in the tab being navigated to? Or is there a better way to move it between them, or just manage visibility?
I would like to have the link bar follow the content on each tab as a footer, 'floating' one or two lines below the last content of each tab (rather than having it in a fixed position relative to the tab bar).
Ok ... It was simply adding the jQuery UI classes to the linkBar. Check out my working jsFiddle demo:
I moved the linkBar div out of the tabOne div and put it at the bottom of the tabs div:
<div id="container">
<div id="title">
<h1>title bar</h1>
</div>
<div id="tabs">
<ul>
<li>one</li>
<li>two</li>
<li>three</li>
</ul>
<div id="tabone">
content goes here
<br><br><br><br>more stuff<br><br><br>more stuff<br><br>
</div>
<div id="tabtwo">
content goes here...
</div>
<div id="tabthree">
content goes here...
</div>
<div id="linkBar">
<span id="leftLink"><< left link</span>
<span id="rightLink">right link >></span>
</div>
</div>
</div>
I slightly altered the linkBar style by giving it a top and bottom margin as well as hiding it by default:
#linkBar {
display: none;
margin: 10px auto;
}
Then I simply added the jQuery UI classes to the $linkBar. I slightly altered the jQuery to be more readable:
$("#accordion").accordion({ header: "h3" });
var $tabs = $("#tabs"),
$linkBar = $("#linkBar");
$linkBar.addClass("ui-tabs-panel ui-widget-content ui-corner-bottom");
$linkBar.show();
$tabs.tabs();
$('#title').click(function() {
$tabs.tabs('select', 0);
return false;
});
Note: You could just add class="ui-tabs-panel ui-widget-content ui-corner-bottom" to the linkBar div and be done with it. But, I think I like it better managed in the JS.