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This Jquery problem has been bugging me for a while now. I developed a script, with one function detecting when the mouse leaves via the top of the page. Here is the code:
$(document).bind("mouseleave", function(e)
{
console.log(e.pageY);
if (e.pageY <= 1)
{
now = new Date();
for (i=0; i < times.length; i++)
{
if (now.getTime() > times[i][0] && now.getTime() < times[i][1])
{
$.fn.colorbox({iframe:true, width:650, height:600, href: "work.html", open: true});
}
}
}
});
This works perfectly for me in all browsers. For some reason it works randomly in Chrome and seemingly not at all in Firefox for a friend that tested the site. In my browser (firefox 3.5.3), e.pageY is logged in the console box as a number near 0, however in my friends browser (also firefox 3.5.3) the lowest value is around 240. I have no idea why this is happening considering identical browsers. Does anyone have a clue as to how to debug this, or another more reliable method to detect when the mouse goes out of the webpage via the top? I hope this makes sense.
This Jquery problem has been bugging me for a while now. I developed a script, with one function detecting when the mouse leaves via the top of the page. Here is the code:
$(document).bind("mouseleave", function(e)
{
console.log(e.pageY);
if (e.pageY <= 1)
{
now = new Date();
for (i=0; i < times.length; i++)
{
if (now.getTime() > times[i][0] && now.getTime() < times[i][1])
{
$.fn.colorbox({iframe:true, width:650, height:600, href: "work.html", open: true});
}
}
}
});
This works perfectly for me in all browsers. For some reason it works randomly in Chrome and seemingly not at all in Firefox for a friend that tested the site. In my browser (firefox 3.5.3), e.pageY is logged in the console box as a number near 0, however in my friends browser (also firefox 3.5.3) the lowest value is around 240. I have no idea why this is happening considering identical browsers. Does anyone have a clue as to how to debug this, or another more reliable method to detect when the mouse goes out of the webpage via the top? I hope this makes sense.
Share Improve this question asked Oct 24, 2009 at 11:35 LobeLobe 53810 silver badges25 bronze badges 3- Have you tried moving the mouse really quick? Events sometimes doesn't fire if mouse moves quickly. – vava Commented Oct 24, 2009 at 11:38
- If moving very quickly it registers the majority of the time (that is not really a concern). However for testing the mouse is moving extremely slowly – Lobe Commented Oct 24, 2009 at 11:40
- @vava, I'm just saying that maybe your friend has slower machine/bigger screen and moves mouse fast. That might be the reason for the difference. – vava Commented Oct 24, 2009 at 12:06
5 Answers
Reset to default 13The problem appears if your window scrolls down, add a bunch of <br/>
s to your page and scroll down one line and you'll see it.
So instead of looking to see if e.pageY <=1, subtract out the scrollTop:
if (e.pageY - $(window).scrollTop() <= 1)
{
// do something
}
I used another technic, almost works for all browsers. The trick is using $("body")
or $(window)
.
$(window)
do not work for IE, but $("body")
works partially for FF as the body might not fill the whole window.
Here's the full page code:
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.3.2/jquery.min.js"></script><script>
var mouseX = 0;
var mouseY = 0;
var theFrame;
$(function() {
theFrame = $("body"); //$(window) for non-IE
theFrame.mousemove( function(e) {
//horizontal distance from edge
mouseX = Math.min(theFrame.width() - e.pageX, e.pageX);
//vertical distance from top
mouseY = e.pageY;
$("#mx").html(mouseX);
$("#my").html(mouseY);
});
theFrame.mouseout(function() {
if(mouseY<=mouseX)
$("#in_out").html("out-top");
else
$("#in_out").html("out");
});
theFrame.mouseover(function() {
$("#in_out").html("in");
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<span id="in_out"></span>
<br />Hor: <span id="mx"></span>
<br />Ver: <span id="my"></span>
</body>
</html>
$(document).on('mouseleave', leaveFromTop);
function leaveFromTop(e){
if( e.clientY < 0 ) // less than 60px is close enough to the top
alert('y u leave from the top?');
}
This doesn't work well on older IE version, because those versions don't report the mouse position as should, but it's good enough.
Here is a vanilla JS solution if you just want something light weight that doesn't need to work in EI
/**
* Trigger an event when the cursor leaves the top of the window
* @param {*} threshold how close does it need to be to the top
* @param {*} cb callback function to trigger
*/
function onExit (threshold, cb) {
threshold = threshold || 60
var hasExited = false
document.addEventListener('mouseout', function (e) {
if (e.clientY < threshold && e.movementY < 0 && !hasExited) {
hasExited = true
cb(e)
}
})
}
Example Usage:
onExit(20, function() {
console.log('Mouse has left the top of the window!')
}
In order to detect mouseleave without taking in account the scroll bar and the autcomplete field or inspect :
document.addEventListener("mouseleave", function(event){
if(event.clientY <= 0 || event.clientX <= 0 || (event.clientX >= window.innerWidth || event.clientY >= window.innerHeight))
{
console.log("I'm out");
}
});
Conditions explanations:
event.clientY <= 0 is when the mouse leave from the top
event.clientX <= 0 is when the mouse leave from the left
event.clientX >= window.innerWidth is when the mouse leave from the right
event.clientY >= window.innerHeight is when the mouse leave from the bottom
Just keep
event.clientY <= 0
If you only want to detect exit on top
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