Preventing flexcroll on event - jquery-ui

What I have currently is a very simple div that has a flexcroll scroll bar. This simple div contains some draggable itmes inside of it. My goal is to be able to drag one of the items and and move it about without the flexcroll scroll bar moving.
As it stands right now if I were to drag one of the items below the viewable area the simple div will scroll down. I would like to prevent this.
I'm using jQuery UI for the draggable items. I've already tried using the option "scroll:false" but this does not work for flexcroll.
I'm sorry I don't have any example code, I'm currently away from my work computer.
flexcroll: http://www.hesido.com/web.php?page=customscrollbar

I don't know if you have already resolved this problem. This morning, I have the same problem and I found your post. After that, I have googled a lot to find a solution without any lucky. So finally, I decided to do someting myself, I hope my idea will help you.
After read the Programming Guid, I found that in this version (2.0) of flexcroll, we could register a function for onfleXcroll whose description could be found by searching the keyword "Pseudo-event: onfleXcroll". This is to say that the method will be executed after a scroll is done. So here, what I restore the "top" style with the value before you drag an element.
Here are the code
var $assetswrapper; // This variable indicates the contentwrapper of you div.
var $assetsscrollbar; // This variable indicates the vscroller of you div.
window.onfleXcrollRun = function () { // This method will be executed as soon as the div has been rendered with the help of flexcroll
// You could find these two divs by using firebug, because the top value of these two divs will be changed when we scroll the div which use the class .flexcroll.
$assetswrapper = $('#contentwrapper');
$assetsscrollbar = $('#vscrollerbar');
}
var wrapperTopPosition = 0; // This is used to stock the top value of the wrapperContent before dragging.
var scrollbarTopPosition = 0; // This is used to stock the top value of the scrollbar before dragging.
var dragged; // This is a boolean variable which is used for indicating whether the draggable element has been dragged.
var dropped = false; // This is a boolean variable which used to say whether the draggable element has been dropped.
$('.draggable').draggable({ // you could change .draggable with any element.
start: function (event, ui) {
// Your code here.
wrapperTopPosition = $assetswrapper.position().top;
scrollbarTopPosition = $assetsscrollbar.position().top
dragged = true;
},
stop: function (event, ui) {
// Your code here.
dragged = false;
dropped = true;
}
});
$('your drag div')[0].onfleXcroll = function () { // This method will be called each time when a scroll has been done.
if (dragged) {
$assetswrapper.css('top', wrapperTopPosition);
$assetsscrollbar.css('top', scrollbarTopPosition);
} else {
// Code here is used for keeping the top position as before even though you have dragged an element out of this div for a long time.
// You could test the scrollbar without this piece of code, if you drag an element out of the div for a long time, the scrollbar will keep its position,
// but after you dropped this element and try to scroll the div, then the scrollbar will reach the end of the div. To solve this problem,
// I have introduced the method setScrollPos with the old top position plus 72. 72 here is to set the scroll increment for this scroll, I know
// this value is not fit for any size of windows, but I don't know how to get the scroll-increment automatically.
if (dropped) {
dropped = false;
$('your drag div')[0].fleXcroll.setScrollPos(false, Math.abs(wrapperTopPosition) + 72);
$('your drag div')[0].fleXcroll.setScrollPos(false, Math.abs(wrapperTopPosition) + 72);
}
}
};
I hope this could give you a help if you haven't found any solution yet.

Related

jquery ui sortable - clicking scrollbar breaks it

Scrolling a div that is within a .sortable() container will start dragging the div when you release the scrollbar
In the fiddle, there are 3 different sortables, 1 of them is a scrolling one
http://jsfiddle.net/wnHWH/1/
Bug: click on the scrollbar and drag it up or down to scroll through the content, when you release the mouse, the div starts to drag, which makes it follow your mouse around and there is no way to unstick it without refreshing the page.
You can use .mousemove event of jquery like this:
$('#sortable div').mousemove(function(e) {
width = $(this).width();
limit = width - 20;
if(e.offsetX < width && e.offsetX > limit)
$('#sortable').sortable("disable");
else
$('#sortable').sortable("enable");
});
I have create fiddle that works here http://jsfiddle.net/aanred/FNzEF/. Hope it meets your need.
sortable() can specify a selector for a handle much like draggable() does. Then only the matched elements get the click events. You specify the handle selector like this:
$('#sortable').sortable( {handle : '.handle'});
You already have most of what you need for the rest. The inner div on your overflowing element makes a suitable handle, like this:
<div style="height: 200px;overflow:auto">
<div class="handle" style="height: 300;">
blah
blah
blah
Then you need to restore the sortability of everything else. You'd think you could just give those divs the handle class, but it's looking for children, so you need to wrap all of them like so:
<div><div class="handle">asadf</div></div>
Modified fiddle
Supplement to SubRed's answer:
This worked perfectly for my needs. However, rather than rely on the width of the scrollbar being 20 pixels (as above), I used the code from:
How can I get the browser's scrollbar sizes?
This allows the code to handle different scrollbar widths on different setups. The code is pasted here for convenience:
function getScrollBarWidth ()
{
var inner = document.createElement('p');
inner.style.width = "100%";
inner.style.height = "200px";
var outer = document.createElement('div');
outer.style.position = "absolute";
outer.style.top = "0px";
outer.style.left = "0px";
outer.style.visibility = "hidden";
outer.style.width = "200px";
outer.style.height = "150px";
outer.style.overflow = "hidden";
outer.appendChild (inner);
document.body.appendChild (outer);
var w1 = inner.offsetWidth;
outer.style.overflow = 'scroll';
var w2 = inner.offsetWidth;
if (w1 == w2) w2 = outer.clientWidth;
document.body.removeChild (outer);
return (w1 - w2);
}
I've also used the width value for the height of the scrollbar and modified SubRed's code to suit. This now works with one or both scrollbars.
I also used code from:
Detecting presence of a scroll bar in a DIV using jQuery?
To determine the presence of either scroll bar and adapted the turning on/off of the sortable code accordingly.
Many thanks.

Bootstrap jQuery UI positioned to float to the top

I've installed Datepicker for Bootstrap and its working nicely. But I can't figure out how to use the place method to position the datepicker above the element instead of below. I'm guessing it works similiar to the bootstrap popovers, but I haven't been able to figure it out.
Any suggestions?
The place function just auto places the date picker under your input box. Its not a function that lets you select where you want to place it.
However you can easily override the default functionality of that function with your own custom placement.
Here is an example of that http://jsfiddle.net/G7sWL/19/
All i did copy the original function and add an additional vertical offset of 10 and horizontal offset of 50.
$(function() {
var picker = $('.datepicker').datepicker();
var widget = picker.data('datepicker');
widget.place = function(){ //the original place function
var offset = this.component ? this.component.offset() : this.element.offset();
this.picker.css({
top: offset.top + this.height + 10, // change #1 = added "+10"
left: offset.left +50 // change #2 = added "+50"
});
}
});
From the page:
.datepicker('place')
Updates the date picker's position relative to the element
It only says it updates the position of the picker (which is absolutely positioned on the page), not that you can change its placement.

Integrate jquery ui draggable with jquery.gantt (works but breaks scrolling)

I am using the jquery-ui draggable component with jquery.gantt here. I could do enable drag on the items easily by $('.ganttRed').draggable() but the problem with this is that once we start scrolling the graph left to right using the slider below, the elements that are moved remain where they are instead of scrolling with the graph.
I looked through the source and from my understanding the margin-left is being changed during the scrolling; but jquery-ui uses the left attribute and in the presence of left the element keeps its position. My CSS knowledge ends just about there so if any of you are willing to provide any suggestions on how this can be fixed; I will greatly appreciate it.
I have a created a fiddle demonstrating the problem at: http://jsfiddle.net/Y2cxa/. In order to see the behavior I am speaking about:
Scroll the graph (either with your mouse wheel or the slider at the bottom); things should look and behave as expected.
Move any of the magenta(-ish) bars around and then scroll.
Again, thank you for your time and any assistance will be greatly appreciated.
Best regards
You have probably solved this or done something else by now but since I needed this aswell i solved it.
Got a solution for you here:
http://jsfiddle.net/Y2cxa/18/
First I simply copied the left value to margin-left and then removed the left value completely, however this led to some strange numbers.
To solve this I compared the start value of left with the final value of left and applied the same difference in pixels to margin-left!
Simply replace:
$('.ganttRed').draggable({axis:'x'});
with:
$('.ganttRed').draggable({
axis:'x',
start: function(event, ui) {
$(this).data("startx",$(this).offset().left);
},
stop: function(event, ui) {
var change = $(this).offset().left - $(this).data("startx");
var value = $(this).css('margin-left');
value = value.split("px");
value = parseInt(value[0]) + change;
$(this).css('margin-left', value);
$(this).css('left', '');
}
});
I believe below is a better solution and I am using it in my application
For vertical and horizonal dragging
$('.ganttRed').draggable(
{
start: function (event, ui) {
$(this).data("startx", $(this).css('left').split("px")[0]);
$(this).data("starty", $(this).css('top').split("px")[0]);
},
stop: function (event, ui) {
var left = parseInt($(this).css('left').split("px")[0]);
var changex = left - parseInt($(this).data("startx"));
var top = parseInt($(this).css('top').split("px")[0]);
top -= top % 24;
$(this).css('top', top);
var changey = top - parseInt($(this).data("starty"));
}
});
changex, changey will be used in calculation while updating in database
For horizontal resizing
$(".ganttRed").resizable({ handles: 'e, w' });

fixed position div freezes on page (iPad)

I have an asp.net web site I am building to be supported on ipad. When I focus on an input element and the keyboard pops up, the position fixed header div(which normally scrolls along with the page) will pop up the page a distance equivalent to the amount the keyboard takes up and freeze there for the duration of the input process. Once the keyboard is dropped back down, the div snaps back into place and behaves normally again. I am testing on iOS5 so position: fixed should be supported.
Is this a known issue? Has someone come across this and dealt with it before? I can't seem to find anything on this.
Fixed positioning is broken on iOS5/iOS6/iOS7.
Edit 3: See link to a working fix near end of this answer for iOS8.
Position:fixed is broken when either:
a) the page is zoomed
or
b) the keyboard shows on the iPad/iPhone (due to an input getting focus).
You can view the bugs yourself in jsbin.com/icibaz/3 by opening the link and zooming, or giving the input focus. You can edit the edit the html yourself.
Notes about bugs (a) and (b):
A fixed div with top: 0px; left: 0px; will show in the wrong position (above or below the top of the screen) when an input gets focus and the keyboard shows.
The problem seems to have something to do with the auto-centering of the input on the screen (changing window.pageYOffset).
It appears to be a calculation fault, and not a redraw fault: if you force the top: to change (e.g. switching between 0px and 1px) on the onScroll event, you can see the fixed div move by a pixel, but it remains in the wrong place.
One solution I used previously is to hide the fixed div when an input gets focus - see the other Answer I wrote.
The fixed div seems to becomes stuck at the same absolute position on the page it was at at the time when the keyboard opened.
So perhaps change the div to absolute positioning when an input has focus? Edit 3: see comment at bottom using this solution. Or perhaps save the pageXOffset/pageYOffset values before the keyboard is opened, and in an onScroll event calculate the difference between those values and the current pageXOffset/pageYOffset values (current once the keyboard is opened), and offset the fixed div by that difference.
There appears to be a different problem with fixed positioning if the page is zoomed - try it here (Also good information here about Android support for fixed in comments).
Edit 1: To reproduce use jsbin (not jsfiddle) and use the fullscreen view of jsbin (not the edit page). Avoid jsfiddle (and edit view of jsbin) because they put the code inside an iframe which causes interference with fixed positioning and pageYOffset.
Edit 2: iOS 6 and iOS 7 Mobile Safari position:fixed; still has the same issues - presumably they are by design!.
Edit 3: A working solution for (b) is when the input get focus, change the header to absolute positioning and then set the header top on the page scroll event for example. This solution:
Uses fixed positioning when input not focused (using window.onscroll has terrible jitter).
Don't allow pinch-zoom (avoid bug (a) above).
Uses absolute positioning and window.pageYOffset once an input gets focus (so header is correctly positioned).
If scrolled while input has focus, set style.top to equal pageYOffset (header will jitter somewhat due to onscroll event delay even on iOS8).
If using UIWebView within an App on iOS8, or using <=iOS7, if scrolling when input has focus, header will be super jittery because onscroll is not fired till scroll finishes.
Go back to fixed position header once input loses focus (Example uses input.onblur, but probably tider to use
document.body.onfocus).
Beware usability fail that if header too large, the input can be occluded/covered.
I couldn't get to work for a footer due to bugs in iOS page/viewport height when the keyboard is showing.
Edit example using http://jsbin.com/xujofoze/4/edit and view using http://output.jsbin.com/xujofoze/4/quiet
For my needs, I found it easier to use an absolute positioned header, hide it before scroll and show it when finish scroll (I need the same code to support iOS4 and Android).
For my purposes, I hide the header on a touchstart event, and show it again on touchend or scroll event (plus some timers to improve responsiveness/reduce flickering). It flashes, but is the best compromise I could find. One can detect the start of scrolling using the touchmove event (jQuery does this), but I found touchmove didn't work as well for me because:
regularly the iPad fails to do a repaint before scrolling (i.e. the absolute header remains stuck - even though the top was changed before scrolling started).
when an input element gets focus, the iPad auto-centres the element, but the scrollstart event doesn't get fired (because no touchmove if just clicking an input).
Implementing a fixed header on iOS5 could be improved by using a hybrid approach of fixed and absolute positioning:
used fixed positioning for iOS5 until an input gets focus.
when an input gets focus (keyboard showing), change to the iOS4 absolute positioning code.
when the keyboard is closed, change back to fixed positioning.
Code to detect when keyboard is closed (e.g. using keyboard hide key) is to register the DOMFocusOut event on the document element and do something like the following code. The timeout is needed because the DOMFocusOut event can fire between when one element gets the focus and another loses it.
function document_DOMFocusOut() {
clearTimeout(touchBlurTimer);
touchBlurTimer = setTimeout(function() {
if (document.activeElement == document.body) {
handleKeyboardHide();
}
}.bind(this), 400);
}
My fixed header code is something like:
{
setup: function() {
observe(window, 'scroll', this, 'onWinScroll');
observe(document, 'touchstart', this, 'onTouchStart');
observe(document, 'touchend', this, 'onTouchEnd');
if (isMobile) {
observe(document, 'DOMFocusOut', this, 'docBlurTouch');
} else if (isIE) {
// see http://ajaxian.com/archives/fixing-loss-of-focus-on-ie for code to go into this.docBlurIe()
observe(document, 'focusout', this, 'docBlurIe');
} else {
observe(isFirefox ? document : window, 'blur', this, 'docBlur');
}
},
onWinScroll: function() {
clearTimeout(this.scrollTimer);
this.scrolling = false;
this.rehomeAll();
},
rehomeAll: function() {
if ((isIOS5 && this.scrolling) || isIOS4 || isAndroid) {
this.useAbsolutePositioning();
} else {
this.useFixedPositioning();
}
},
// Important side effect that this event registered on document on iOs. Without it event.touches.length is incorrect for any elements in the document using the touchstart event!!!
onTouchStart: function(event) {
clearTimeout(this.scrollTimer);
if (!this.scrolling && event.touches.length == 1) {
this.scrolling = true;
this.touchStartTime = inputOrOtherKeyboardShowingElement(event.target) ? 0 : (new Date).getTime();
// Needs to be in touchStart so happens before iPad automatic scrolling to input, also not reliable using touchMove (although jQuery touch uses touchMove to unreliably detect scrolling).
this.rehomeAll();
}
},
onTouchEnd: function(event) {
clearTimeout(this.scrollTimer);
if (this.scrolling && !event.touches.length) {
var touchedDuration = (new Date).getTime() - this.touchStartTime;
// Need delay so iPad can scroll to the input before we reshow the header.
var showQuick = this.touchStartTime && touchedDuration < 400;
this.scrollTimer = setTimeout(function() {
if (this.scrolling) {
this.scrolling = false;
this.rehomeAll();
}
}.bind(this), showQuick ? 0 : 400);
}
},
// ... more code
}
jQuery mobile supports scrollstart and scrollstop events:
var supportTouch = $.support.touch,
scrollEvent = "touchmove scroll",
touchStartEvent = supportTouch ? "touchstart" : "mousedown",
touchStopEvent = supportTouch ? "touchend" : "mouseup",
touchMoveEvent = supportTouch ? "touchmove" : "mousemove";
function triggerCustomEvent( obj, eventType, event ) {
var originalType = event.type;
event.type = eventType;
$.event.handle.call( obj, event );
event.type = originalType;
}
// also handles scrollstop
$.event.special.scrollstart = {
enabled: true,
setup: function() {
var thisObject = this,
$this = $( thisObject ),
scrolling,
timer;
function trigger( event, state ) {
scrolling = state;
triggerCustomEvent( thisObject, scrolling ? "scrollstart" : "scrollstop", event );
}
// iPhone triggers scroll after a small delay; use touchmove instead
$this.bind( scrollEvent, function( event ) {
if ( !$.event.special.scrollstart.enabled ) {
return;
}
if ( !scrolling ) {
trigger( event, true );
}
clearTimeout( timer );
timer = setTimeout(function() {
trigger( event, false );
}, 50 );
});
}
};
This is somewhat still a problem in iOS13 (when a long text gets deleted in the 'textarea' field, fixed header jumps to the start of that 'textarea' field, obstructing the view), therefore, I thought I share my quick fix:
Since my footer is rather large, I went about without any JS and just adding a greater z-index to the footer than what the fixed header has. Out of sight, out of mind.

Set z-index to dynamically generated image label to prevent overlapped label hidden from image

I am implementing drag and drop, user can drag few images and drop them in a div, and I dynamically append a p tag as label to each image once user click on a button.
Currently I meet problem when I have 2 images which is very close to each other (one is on top of another). The appended p tag for the top images will be hidden by the bottom image. I tried to alert the z-index for each dropped image, and found out it is 'auto'. I guess I need to assign a new z-index for each div, but I tried in the function which i append the label, and it dint work as expect:
function generateLabel() {
var current = 5000;
$('#rightframe img').each(function () {
var cImgName = $(this).attr('id');
var width = $(this).width();
// To select the respective div
var temp = "div#" + cImgName;
$.ajax({
url: '/kitchen/generatelabel',
type: 'GET',
data: { containerImgName: cImgName },
async: false,
success: function (result) {
$(temp).append(result);
// I guess the each function loop through each div according to the time it is created, so I try to assign a decreasing z-index
$(temp).css('z-index', current);
current -= 100;
// To select the label for the image
temp += " p";
// Set label width based on image width
$(temp).width(width);
}
});
});
However, what I get is, bottom image which dropped later do NOT hide the label of the image above, but if the above image is dropped after than the bottom image, above image's label is hide by the bottom image.
It's a very specific situation and I hope I do make myself clear...
Hope can get some help here... Appreciate any feedback...
I am so glad that I able to work out a solution for this kinda weird problem. I get to one useful plugin, the jquery-overlaps which check 2 dom whether they are overlapped with each other or not. Then i assign a z-index to the label accordingly.
Just to show my solution here, in case anyone jump into this bottleneck :)
// To assign an increasing z-index to the label
var count = 100;
$('#rightdiv p').each(function () {
// If any label overlaps with the image (used overlaps plugin)
if ($(this).overlaps($('#rightdiv img'))) {
// Increase count (the z-index)
count += 10;
// Set the parent div z-index 1st, if not the label z-index do not have effect
$(this).parent().css('z-index', count);
$(this).css('z-index', count);
}
});
Thanks! :D

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