Document But When Using The Object Onmousemove It Seems To Run The Code Even If The Mouse Is Still Over Then Document
Dec 6, 2010
I am trying to make a function run if the mouse is moved over the document but when using the object onmousemove it seems to run the code even if the mouse is still over then document, how can I make it so if the mouse is over the document but isn't moving then don't run the code but once the mouse moves run the code? This is the code I made to handle the mouse move collections.
[Code]..
But with this code it runs even when the user doesn't move their mouse and the notification box pops up every second as the code seems to think a still mouse is a moving mouse.
I was thinking about having a run once system but that would mean if the mouse moves it runs once and then if the mouse moves again the code will not run as it has already ran before.
I have created a servlet that does nothing more than create a XML file.i have got some JQuery code that reloads the servlet to get the XML data.This works fine and i am able to load the data i want, the problem i have is that when the data is loaded to the jsp page it displays [object Document] in front of my output.
I have been searching for a way to trap changes done to the document object (mainly by the function document.write();).
Example of code that doesn't work:
function myFunction() { ed.document.onchange = doFunction(document.body.innerHTML); ed.document.open(); ed.document.write('Hello'); ed.document.close(); }
function do_function(body) { alert(body); }
It only fires when the page loads, not when I change the text. You are free to use any event that works, but i think onchange was the one to fit this problem. The alert will write the initialpage, but will never write the tekst 'Hello' that is the new change.
Any javagurus out there know a solution to pick up any fired events triggered by document.write();
there are 2 divisions. there is a word-document loaded in first division. when the user clicks somewhere in the document, i need some event to return to me something that is a valid activedocument.range, so i can select it and work with it.
it seems that the only way to get access to mouse position is via predefined events: mouseover, etc, where the mouse-position/object-beneath-mouse is stored in some properties of the event object such as clientX/target;
these properties are only accessible to me, the web developer, via the event object generated for the event;
so the problem is: what happens if none of the pre-defined events suit me?
specifically - all of the pre-defined events depend on user interaction: onmousemove, onfocus, onscroll, etc;
so if I do not have a user-interaction at some moment but yet still need mouse-position/object-beneath-mouse information I am out of luck ...
UNLESS I know how the event objects gather that info themselves;
for instance, onmouseover -- how does some <div> know that the mouse just moved over it?
I presume that on some internal clock scale, a time_A_mouse_pos is compared to a time_B_mouse_pos; and furthermore all objects in the document are queried at each time_N until some object says "hey, browser, I am located at that position";
so I would like to know how to access this internal communication between the mouse and the document that apparently the 'event' object accesses whenever an event is generated;
I am not an expert in javascripting, so forgive me. What i am trying to do is disable embedded pdf documents from being scrolled up and down with the middle mousewheel button on the mouse.I am using embedded PDF files as a way to easily display reports through a browser (FireFox). The actual PDF is about 10 pages long, but the HTML page is coded with the embed tag and uses the Open Parameters to display just a few aspects of the PDF, in an easy to read format. The annoying part is that the embedded PDF sections can accidentally be scrolled with the mousewheel, which ruins the look of the report in the browser. Is there a way to disable this?
As you can see in the first div, i was trying to use javascript to disable the mouse wheel, which did not work. Since each div is a snapshot of the embedded pdf file, is there a javascript that can disable the mousewheel scroll for each section by placing it in the body tag?
I've spent the last few hours trying to make the jump from prototype to jquery. I'm trying to use jQuery's crossbrowser event handling but I can't seem to register the event. I've tried lots of combinations and permutations that I've seen on the web but nothing seems to be working so I must be missing something.
$(document).ready(function() { $(document).mousedown(makeDomPath); }); function makeDomPath(e)
[Code]....
and none of them fired. The goal here is to have a single event handler that catches all the mousedown events in the page.
Suppose a HTML document has a iframe. Using javascript,I want to detect ,on load of the html document, whether the body of the iframe document is ready to be displayed.I want to be able to overwrite the the body contents (before it actullay loads) of the iframe.can I do it with jquery? say if ,HTML doc is
In an if statement with "document.images" as it's expression, does it simply check if there are any image elements in an HTML page? I'm assuming if it finds any that the expression will return true and execute the statements within the if.
Normally an SVG document is loaded/parsed/interpreted inside an HTML document using an 'object' (or 'embed') element, although there are supposedly other ways too. The problem is, the SVG document must be static this way.
I want to use the DOM interface to build SVG dynamically inside an HTML document. I am guessing I can build it inside HTML within an 'object' (or maybe 'iframe'?) element.
My intentions/goals:
In Javascript, I construct an object 'embedSVG' which has properties and methods for creating valid SVG elements and setting their attributes and attribute values.
During construction, the SVG document is created with its root element. During debugging in FF 2.0 (I'll work on an MSIE-compatible format later), I am using the Mozilla DOM Inspector and comparing nodes when the 'object' element is loading a valid external SVG document, and when I am appending the child representing the SVG document created by the DOM functions.
However the child node (#document) does not specify 'svg' as the root element, but instead 'HTML'. Something is not working.
Here is the relevant code in 'ScriptTest.html' which is the HTML in which the SVG is supposed to be embedded. Below it is the relevant code for 'svglib.js' which is supposed to contain code for building the SVG dynamically.
What this code is supposed to do is load the HTML page and execute the anonymous script, and draw a navy blue-bordered yellow rectangle on a blank page. This is similar to the example in the SVG 1.1 W3C Recommendation on page 202 of the 719-page PDF.
I am getting an exception when embedSVG object placeInHTML() method is called: NS_ERROR_DOM_HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR. I find in DOM Inspector in spite of or after the exception that a document is placed as a child of the object element, but it is HTML, with a default 'head', 'title', 'body' elements placed.
Determine what the previous page was that the user was viewing, even if the user arrived at my site by through the use of a browser function (history, location bar, refresh, etc.). Is this possible?
I'm not wuite sure how document.history functions - what degree of privacy is given to the user and to what extent can web pages get URLs from the user's history?
If I have a div in a document containing ordered lists (ul,li etc) and I use AJAX interaction with the server to modify the content of the div without page refresh, am I right in assuming that I cannot inspect or manipulate this new content using document.getElementById and similar methods of working with the document object? Or is there some way to do this?
I have a function that takes parameters of what the form name and the form object name is and then modifies the form accordingly. Now I can make it work fine if i make a separate function for each form object, but that seems very cumbersome. This is what I have
document.formName.formCat.selectedIndex;
i want formName and formCat to be variables so I can specify in the parameters which part of the form to deal with, but i get an erorr. Is this possible?
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <title>test</title> </head> <body> <script type="text/javascript"> try{ var foo=document.writeln; foo( 'Hello, world!' ); } catch( e ) { alert( e ); } </script> </body></html>
IE has no problem with this, but Firefox throws an exception - "Illegal operation on WrappedNative prototype object". Is it within its rights to do so?
I know that to run jQuery when the document is ready, you just use $(function() { ...jquery code... });
but that isn't allways what I want, sometimes I want to one or more jQuery codes when for a example a div (with a class or id) has been created, or when an image has loaded.
I want to switch a big function from a document.onkeydown = function to a document.onkeypress = function, or vice versa depeding on the type of browser.
However it is quite a big function so it's pretty much out of the question to have it appear in full twice.
Any ideas how to change the target event (onkeydown/onkeypress) without writing the whole function twice?
I am working on creating a document where you check a bunch of checkboxes to select what to include, then click on a button. A function then opens a new window and writes the HTML code to run scripts in .js files to populate the page. Code:
I am trying to write a bunch of text onto a new document using document.write() and somehow need to format it to include line breaks.
For example: Code JavaScript: document.write(Line 1); document.write(Line 2);
I have tried including and it does not work. I have also tried document.writeln() and that also does not work. From what I have found on the Internet, one (if not both) of those methods should have worked.