The event-mouseenter
module adds support for "mouseenter" and
"mouseleave" events that are often preferable alternatives to "mouseover"
and "mouseout".
The event-hover
module adds support for a "hover" event that combines
subscriptions to each of these two events, taking two callback
functions, one for when the mouse enters the subscribed node, and another
for when it leaves the node.
mouseover
and mouseout
are noisyThe mouseover
and mouseout
events bubble. That means with the following DOM structure...
<div id="hover-me"> <div class="header"> <button class="close">Close</button> </div> <div class="body"> ... more markup </div> </div>
...a mouseover
subscription on #hover-me
would be called three times when a user moved the mouse over the close button because
mouseover
event bubbled to #hover-memouseover
event bubbled to #hover-meChances are, you don't care about any of these except the first. That's where mouseenter
and mouseleave
come in. They only fire when the e.target
of the event is the node subscribed to. That means no noise.
YUI().use('event-mouseenter', 'transition', function (Y) { var hoverMe = Y.one('#hover-me'); hoverMe.on('mouseenter', function () { this.one('.header').transition('fadeIn'); }); hoverMe.on('mouseleave', function () { this.one('.header').transition('fadeOut'); }); });
Though these events work by essentially not bubbling, you can still delegate mouseenter
and mouseleave
using node.delegate(...)
.
// The overHandler callback will be executed when any .hoverable // element is moused over. container.delegate('mouseenter', overHandler, '.hoverable');
mouseenter
+ mouseleave
== hover
It's common to pair mouseenter
and mouseleave
subscriptions (or
mouseover
and mouseout
for the uninitiated) to create an effect that only
lasts as long as the mouse is over an element. To make that easier, the
event-hover
module adds a hover
event. It accepts a second callback and
attaches the first to mouseenter
and the second to mouseleave
.
YUI().use('event-hover', 'transition', function (Y) { function over() { this.one('.header').transition('fadeIn'); } function out() { this.one('.header').transition('fadeOut'); } // Two callbacks, `mouseenter` and `mouseleave` Y.one('#hover-me').on('hover', over, out); });
If you need to override the default this
object assignment or bind arguments to a hover
subscription, just add those arguments after the second callback.
Similarly, if you want to delegate the hover
event, pass a CSS filter after the second callback.
// Default `this` to racerX mach5.on('hover', racerX.oilSlick, racerX.tireSpikes, racerX); // The delegate filter comes before the `this` override ruralTown.delegate('hover', ufo.scan, ufo.memoryWipe, '.person', ufo);