Restrict Script To Running When Called By A Certain Element?
Sep 17, 2011
I picked up this Drag n Drop script years ago from the net. Modified it slightly but one mod i cant make work is limiting it to only running when the mouse is over an ID called dragid. Currently a mouse drag anywhere in the browser moves the dragid element which is annoying.
HTML Code:
//Drag and Drop script
if(document.getElementById){
(function(){
//Stop Opera selecting anything whilst dragging.
what I would like to know is - within the highlight function what ways are there of getting the id of the image element that called the function? I was thinking I could declaritively pass the id to the function like so - onmouseover="highlight(1)". or would onmouseover="highlight(this.ID)" work? Or is there a better way of getting the id of the calling img element from within the highlight function, I'm thinking that perhaps there is a sender object that I can make use of that I don't know about, if so how do I use it?
I'm sending some information to a php file using jQuery.Ajax.In the meantime i add a button to the page called delete_0 for the first element, delete_1 for the second, ....The php generates a unique ID and I need it back in the JSTherefore i tried to let the php run a js function in the end:
addItemToQueue ( ID ); function addItemToQueue(ID){ jQuery("#delete_" +
I've been banging my head against this extremely frustrating bug but I finally managed to get an isolated test case. Call .animate() on two different elements one after the other and give the second one a "complete" callback. In the callback function call .stop() on the first element, the one with no callback.
The callback function should only fire once (when the second element's animation completes) but instead it fires twice. It only occurs when the animations are started in that order and stop() is called inside the callback.[URL]...
have made a homepage with nvu and works good but want to restrict access to all pages except the main page. i want everyone that tries to access a subpage directly to be redirected to the mainpage.
is there any simple way to achieve that ? must be in html or javascript.
I am using IE 6.0. On a page, I have placed a contenteditable div which I want to use as a Rich Text Area. I am using the execCommand method of the document to control bold, italics, underlining, and undo for this div.
I have placed an input element on the page to. All but the undo, are restricted to working only on the div. How can I restrict the undo to working on only the div?
Below is the complete page so you can see what I am talking about. Just paste it into an htm file and traverse to it via your browser. Type something in the div and the input and then try the buttons. Code:
How do i restrict files types that can be accessed when using the input element type file...like the one used when uploading..how do i restrict it to certain files with given file extensions?
I've a textbox field, where user enters his name. I want to restrict him from entering double and singls inverted commas.What kind of function should i write.
I need to restrict an area on the image but also get the coordinates from the image. I am using a form element "input type=image" so I can get the X Y coordinates from an image. I don't want the user clicking on a whole image, in this case a map of a country. I don't want the users clicking off the country's borders in to another country and I want to be able to get the coordinates from inside the country. I have tried to mix the element from the form with the area shape so when someone will click on the image it will first verify if it's over the hotspot and if it's over the poly coords then it will allow the user to click, the form will submit and the coordinates will be stored into the database.
I just don't know how I could integrate javascript into this. This is my code, not really something functional, the coordinates will pass on to the next page as a variable but limiting the area where the users may click is something that I have not figured out. I can create an area shape but without getting the coordinates from the image. Anything will do, even without <input type=image , if there is some way around this so I can make this work.
In JSP / HTML, I want to restrict the size of file being uploaded.
<input type="file" name="myfile"/>
If the user trying to upload a file size bigger than some value say 5MB, i want to give mesage to the user. I don't want to wait till the file gets uploaded to server and then validate the file size. I am looking for client side validation. Can it be done using scripting language or any other way?
Need a solution for this in Internet Explorer. I got a solution using ActiveX control:
var myFSO = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject"); var filepath = document.getElementById('myfile').value; var thefile = myFSO.getFile(filepath); var sizeInBytes = thefile.size;
But ActiveX controls are not allowed in our application. Is there any alternative way for this?
I'm currently generating some tooltips to display data for certain items in a game. The tooltips and stats work great, however, for certain items, the tooltip gets long and will extend pass the viewable range for the user.
Here are the links: test page: [URL] javascript: [URL] css (for hover div only): [URL]
If you hover over the links of items (like villages, barracks, etc.) a tooltip will pop up to show you the stats. But if you notice, for items like castles, the tooltip can extend past the viewable range for the user.
Does anyone have code to restrict input of a singli quote and a backslash in input field? I need to make sure this code works in IE, FF, Opera. Well, all major browsers
Is there anyway of restricting the amount of webpages open. I would like users of a site only to beable to have two pages (from the site i am talking about) open at anyone time.
I have a Web application and the web resources like jss,css,jquery files are located outside of the WEB-INF directory (Java application) and if some user or hacker change the URL could see the source code for many js and jquery files.
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.
When the number of menus (including a menu and its submenus) reach a particular number, then after that rest of the menus are not getting displayed. Is there any settings available to restrict number of menus in superfish?
I m having trouble restricting an action to a single image. I am trying to make the background fade to full opacity on hover, and have that working like I want to. The problem is that when I hover one image, ALL the images fade to full opacity. Obviously it would be nice to only have the one that is being hovered over. I am sure it is just a simple thing in the code but I just can't figure out what it is.
Basically am working on the travel booking site,i written the lot of ajax scripts , so am little bit fear of that ajax ,becoz if some one tried to access anonymously So i dont want to user access or takeing my javascript fileTell me how to restrict the use get my javascript filecouple of days back i saw on site, in the i take that site js url , and when i typed on the Browser , the system say , you cant view this URL
I was wondering if it is possible to restrict the values of a text input box to only accept set values such as "XBC1". I am trying to make a form for a scanner so you can scan bar codes and it will auto fill the form out and have default values set so incorrect values cant be submitted into the database and mess everything up.
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?
I know what the !-- and // -- do in a script, but what are they called? I've never heard a name for them, and personally I have always referred to them as passover signals, because they make old browsers who can't read code in between the !-- and // -- skip it all so errors won't come up.