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I've read that mobile Safari has a 300ms delay on click events from the time the link/button is clicked to the time the event fires. The reason for the delay is to wait to see if the user intends to double-click, but from a UX perspective waiting 300ms is often undesirable.
One solution to eliminate this 300ms delay is to use jQuery Mobile "tap" handling. Unfortunately I'm not familiar with this framework and don't want to load some big framework if all I need is a line or two of code applying touchend
in the right way.
Like many sites, my site has many click events like this:
$("button.submitBtn").on('click', function (e) {
$.ajaxSubmit({... //ajax form submisssion
});
$("a.ajax").on('click', function (e) {
$.ajax({... //ajax page loading
});
$("button.modal").on('click', function (e) {
//show/hide modal dialog
});
and what I'd like to do is to get rid of the 300ms delay on ALL those click events using a single code snippet like this:
$("a, button").on('tap', function (e) {
$(this).trigger('click');
e.preventDefault();
});
Is that a bad/good idea?
I've read that mobile Safari has a 300ms delay on click events from the time the link/button is clicked to the time the event fires. The reason for the delay is to wait to see if the user intends to double-click, but from a UX perspective waiting 300ms is often undesirable.
One solution to eliminate this 300ms delay is to use jQuery Mobile "tap" handling. Unfortunately I'm not familiar with this framework and don't want to load some big framework if all I need is a line or two of code applying touchend
in the right way.
Like many sites, my site has many click events like this:
$("button.submitBtn").on('click', function (e) {
$.ajaxSubmit({... //ajax form submisssion
});
$("a.ajax").on('click', function (e) {
$.ajax({... //ajax page loading
});
$("button.modal").on('click', function (e) {
//show/hide modal dialog
});
and what I'd like to do is to get rid of the 300ms delay on ALL those click events using a single code snippet like this:
$("a, button").on('tap', function (e) {
$(this).trigger('click');
e.preventDefault();
});
Is that a bad/good idea?
Share Improve this question edited Jan 15, 2013 at 16:04 tim peterson asked Sep 2, 2012 at 18:25 tim petersontim peterson 24.3k63 gold badges184 silver badges302 bronze badges 6- 5 Here is an interesting article for you. – Pointy Commented Sep 2, 2012 at 18:27
- @Pointy thanks, this might just work... – tim peterson Commented Sep 2, 2012 at 18:38
- "...obviously this isn't great from a UX perspective." I would be wary about this assumption. – Oliver Moran Commented Sep 2, 2012 at 18:58
- 1 @OliverMoran, thanks for the correction, i just edited that sentence, see the question above.. – tim peterson Commented Sep 2, 2012 at 19:01
- 1 might be a solution: stackoverflow.com/a/12969739/1491212 – Armel Larcier Commented Nov 3, 2012 at 12:40
10 Answers
Reset to default 81Now some mobile browsers eliminate 300 ms click delay if you set the viewport. You don't need to use workarounds anymore.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, user-scalable=no">
This is currently supported Chrome for Android, Firefox for Android and Safari for iOS
However on iOS Safari, double-tap is a scroll gesture on unzoomable pages. For that reason they can't remove the 300ms delay. If they can't remove the delay on unzoomable pages, they're unlikely to remove it on zoomable pages.
Windows Phones also retain the 300ms delay on unzoomable pages, but they don't have an alternative gesture like iOS so it's possible for them to remove this delay as Chrome has. You can remove the delay on Windows Phone using:
html {
-ms-touch-action: manipulation;
touch-action: manipulation;
}
Source: http://updates.html5rocks.com/2013/12/300ms-tap-delay-gone-away
UPDATE 2015 December
Until now, WebKit and Safari on iOS had a 350ms delay before single taps activate links or buttons to allow people to zoom into pages with a double tap. Chrome changed this a couple of months ago already by using a smarter algorithm to detect that and WebKit will follow with a similar approach. The article gives some great insights how browsers work with touch gestures and how browsers can still get so much smarter than they are today.
UPDATE 2016 March
On Safari for iOS, the 350 ms wait time to detect a second tap has been removed to create a “fast-tap” response. This is enabled for pages that declare a viewport with either width=device-width or user-scalable=no. Authors can also opt in to fast-tap behavior on specific elements by using the CSS touch-action: manipulation
as documented here (scroll down to the 'Styling Fast-Tap Behavior' heading) and here.
This plugin -FastClick developed by Financial Times does it perfectly for you!
Make sure though to add event.stopPropagation();
and/or event.preventDefault();
directly after the click function, otherwise it might run twice as it did for me, i.e.:
$("#buttonId").on('click',function(event){
event.stopPropagation(); event.preventDefault();
//do your magic
});
i know this is old but can't you just test to see if "touch" is supported in the browser? Then create a variable that's either "touchend" or "click" and use that variable as the event that gets bound to your element?
var clickOrTouch = (('ontouchend' in window)) ? 'touchend' : 'click';
$('#element').on(clickOrTouch, function() {
// do something
});
So that code sample checks to see if the "touchend" event is supported in the browser and if not then we use the "click" event.
(Edit: changed "touchend" to "ontouchend")
I've come across a hugely popular alternative called Hammer.js (Github page) which I think is the best approach.
Hammer.js is a more full-featured touch library (has many swipe commands) than Fastclick.js (most upvoted answer).
Beware though: scrolling fast on mobile devices tends to really lock up the UI when you use either Hammer.js or Fastclick.js. This is a major problem if your site has a newsfeed or an interface where users will be scrolling a lot (would seem like most web apps). For this reason, I'm using neither of these plugins at the moment.
Somehow, disabling zoom seems to disable this small delay. Makes sense, as double-tap isn't needed anymore then.
How can I "disable" zoom on a mobile web page?
But please be aware of the usability impact this will have. It may be useful for webpages designed as apps, but shouldn't be used for more general-purpose 'static' pages IMHO. I use it for a pet project that needs low latency.
Unfortunately there is no easy way to do this. So just using touchstart
or touchend
will leave you with other problems like someone starts scrolling when click on on a button for example. We use zepto for a while, and even with this really good framework there are some issues that came up over the time. A lot of them are closed, but it seems is not a field of simple solution.
We have this solution to globally handle clicks on links:
$(document.body).
on('tap', 'a',function (e) {
var href = this.getAttribute('href');
if (e.defaultPrevented || !href) { return; }
e.preventDefault();
location.href= href;
}).
on('click', 'a', function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
});
I searched for an easy way without jquery and without fastclick library. This works for me:
var keyboard = document.getElementById("keyboard");
var buttons = keyboard.children;
var isTouch = ("ontouchstart" in window);
for (var i=0;i<buttons.length;i++) {
if ( isTouch ) {
buttons[i].addEventListener('touchstart', clickHandler, false);
} else {
buttons[i].addEventListener('click', clickHandler, false);
}
}
In jQuery you can bind "touchend" event, witch trigger code inmediatly after tap (is like a keydown in keyboard). Tested on current Chrome and Firefox tablet versions. Don't forget "click" also, for your touch screen laptops and desktop devices.
jQuery('.yourElements').bind('click touchend',function(event){
event.stopPropagation();
event.preventDefault();
// everything else
});
Just to provide some extra information.
On iOS 10, <button>
s on my page could not be triggered continuously. There was always a lag.
I tried fastclick / Hammer / tapjs / replacing click with touchstart, all failed.
UPDATE: the reason seems to be that the button is too close to the edge! move it to near the center and lag gone!
You're supposed to explicitly declare passive mode :
window.addEventListener('touchstart', (e) => {
alert('fast touch');
}, { passive : true});
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