JQuery :: No Cursor Pointer When Mouse Over Nested Element Inside Li Tag
Nov 23, 2011
I would like to change cursor to pointer when mouse is over li element and it works until mouse gets over input or label element. I want to have pointer alse when mouse is over label or input in li elment.
i have a menu generated by a list with nested lists. i want the parent link to stay highlighted when the mouse hovers over the sub menus. because those sub menus are also generated by jquery (qtip), CSS alone won't do it (triedul.topnav li:hover a {background-color: #F00;}).is there a way to do this using jquery?
Is there a way of displaying the id of the element under the pointer ?
Please dont ask why I need it, but I do, i found tools that needs installation that provide the same funcitonality. However, I would like to turn on this feature using a flag in my url. Something like debug=1.
I have a link with a return false;I have the style (cursor: pointer) set in the CSS and also triedsetting it in Javascript.When I click on the link, the hand cursor goes to the default arrow.(I'm guessing it's the browsers default behavior to change it back tothe arrow when a link is clicked.)
With the following code I can change the mouse pointer. However, if you click in Mozilla (with IE it works perfect) on 'Show hourglass' the mouse pointer changes only if you move the mouse at least on pixel.
<html> <body> <script type = 'text/javascript'> function show_hourglass() { document.getElementById("my_href1").style.cursor = "wait"; document.getElementById("my_href2").style.cursor = "wait"; }
I'm making a webpage for a little embedded device with a touch screen. I don't want the mouse pointer to be visible until the user clicks on a link in which case the mouse pointer should change to an hour glass until the new page is displayed (the device is rather slow so the user needs to get some feedback while waiting). code...
This properly hides the cursor after the first page is loaded but it doesn't display the hour glass when I click on the link. Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?
Is it possible with jQuery, or JavaScript for that matter, to trap the mouse in a div or other tag so that it can only move around in it. I'd like this for a modal window so thta the user knows that they must do something in the window first before carrying on.
I would want to show a div (the information about the song) when the visitor hover on a cover art on a radio website but this div overlap the cover art with an opacity of 0.7
You can see an example here: [url]
The problem is that when the information div appears, the mouse pointer isn't on the cover art div anymore for the navigator so the information div disappears, and so on... resulting in a flash effect.
I have a TD element, with a SPAN element inside. I use td-s onmouseover and onmouseout events for a small animation. My problem is, that, when I move the cursor over the SPAN element, the onmouseout event for TD element is fired. I want to prevent this. With other words, I want onmouseout fired, just when the cursor is moved outside the td area. See the code..
I am trying to redevelop firefox addon, to give it more funcionality. I found JS file where all the functions are and started to edit it.
What I want to achieve is to get target of an anchor under mouse pointer (when mouse pointer is over anchor, I right click and call addon from context menu).
For example when I have anchor which HTML code is:
<a href="somewehere.com/place">place</a>
when I right click on this code and call my addon I would like to alert its href (somewehere.com/place)
I wrote a function:
function ff() { var current_target=this.href; alert(current_target); }
I am trying to redevelop firefox addon, to give it more functionality. I found JS file where all the functions are and started to edit it.
What I want to achieve is to get target of an anchor under mouse pointer (when mouse pointer is over anchor, I right click and call addon from context menu).
For example when I have anchor which HTML code is code...
I have a JavaScript routine that runs on a timer and updates the position of a background image using the CSS background-position property. In Internet Explorer, it changes the mouse pointer to an hourglass when it refreshes the screen, and this is really annoying since it happens on the timer, about every 100 milliseconds or so. Is there anything I can do about this?
I have a site at: [URL] If you notice at the bottom, you'll see PREV :: NEXT navigation links. When you mouse over them, the mouse icon turns to a Cursor. Does anyone know how I can revert this back to a regular mouse "hand" icon for better usability purposes? The cursor is not intuitive, imho.
How do I get the mouse pointer to change as if over an active link when moused over a div.This my code, you can click anywhere on the div and it will fadeout as expected, but the mouse pointer has the appearance of not being active.
I've created a carousel widget on [URL].. (under 'Featured Personas' and 'Featured Designers'). Every now and then when the arrow navigation images are clicked, the mouse returns to the default arrow from a hand. (note: when you are at the end of the carousel, the mouse will change to an arrow). This is not supposed to happen, if I move the cursor away from the navigation arrow and back over, it changes back to a hand as intended. It should stay a hand until the end of the carousel is reached. I've only been able to reproduce it sporadically,
I am finishing up my website, right now I am using Flexcroll for the scrollbar in my main content window. Problem is, I want people to be able to use the mouse wheel to scroll that content window regardless of the mouse position.
My website is www. paulfenton .tk/wordpress if you want to see it.
I was wondering if anyone knew a way I can keep the mouse wheel focus on that internal div so I can scroll up and down at all times.
I'm probably just blanking today, but, how can I find out what type the cursor currently is? Is document.activeElement.style.cursor the way to go on this? But that's only for IE, right?