I have a phone number link at the top of my website, the number is 1300 GO POOPIES. (for example purposes :P)
<h1 class="phone-text">
1300 GO POOPIES
</h1>
So basically, when a person puts their mouse over the 1300 GO POOPIES it changes to 1300 46 7667437.
I don't want to use an image however as I want to preserve the click-to-call functionality.
I tried to do something with CSS, with minimal success however.
.phone-text::after {
content: "1300 GO POOPIES";
}
.phone-text:hover:after {
content: "1300 76 67437";
}
not sure if this is out of the boundaries of css, and needs java...
You don't even need to load jQuery or JS.
CSS+HTML only.
FIDDLE
If there is a reason for you avoiding JavaScript, then this can be achieved with just CSS if you're willing to add some extra markup. You do so by putting two elements inside the <a> tag, one with the numeric number, one with the alphanumeric number. Then you can hide/show them independently with a:hover selectors.
HTML
<h1 class="phone-text">
<a href="tel:+6113007667437">
<span class="letters">1300 GO POOPIES</span>
<span class="digits">1300 76 67437</span>
</a>
</h1>
CSS
.phone-text a .digits,
.phone-text a:hover .letters {
display: none;
}
.phone-text a .letters,
.phone-text a:hover .digits {
display: inline;
}
jsFiddle
You want something a little more in depth... Here goes.
Html
<a href="tel:+6113007667437">
<div id="hide">
<h1>1300 76 67437</h1>
</div>
<div>
<h1>1300 GO POOPIES</h1>
</div>
</a>
And your css
div{
position:absolute;
background:#ffffff;
}
div#hide:hover{
display:none;
}
How about this http://jsfiddle.net/tzerb/S52bz/
< a class="phone-text" href="tel:+6113007667437" >< /a >
here you have a variation to the solution proposed by yaponyal. it works without the > sign.
.hiden {
display:none;
}
a:hover .shown {
display:none;
}
a:hover .hiden {
display:inline;
}
Try this:
$('a').hover(
function(){
$(this).text('1300 76 67437')
},
function(){
$(this).text('1300 GO POOPIES')
}
});
Related
Thanks for taking a look at my question.
I'm trying to be able to hover over portfolio items but I need to loop through them using each() because I need some way of identifying each item.
I'm trying to hover over .recent-work-item to show .recent-work-item__overlay the .show-none class does display:none;
Neither the hover nor the on.("mouseenter", function(){}) is working.
Here is the HMTL:
<section class="recent-work-item" data-portfolio-id="rwi-<?php echo $i;?>">
<div class="recent-work-item__overlay show-none">
<h3 class="color-white bolder-font"><?php the_title(); ?></h3>
VIEW CASE
</div>
<div class="recent-work-img">
<img src="<?php echo get_template_directory_uri();?>/assets/img/work1.jpg" class="portrait">
</div>
Here is the jQuery:
$.each($('.recent-work-item'), function(){
var thisid = $(this).attr("data-portfolio-id");
console.log(thisid);
$("[data-portfolio-id="+"'"+thisid+"']").on('mouseenter', function(){
$(thisid).find('.recent-work-item__overlay').removeClass('show-none');
});
$("[data-portfolio-id="+"'"+thisid+"']").on('mouseleave',function(){
$(thisid).find('.recent-work-item__overlay').addClass('show-none');
});
});
This is not working, I can't get the hover to work and all I want to do is add or remove a class, can I not do this in each().
I've researched thoroughly in StackOverflow but can't find an answer. I would REALLY appreciate any help I can get on this.
I have test your code in my codepen, and the problem you should use $(this) than use $(thisid)
$.each($('.recent-work-item'), function(){
var thisid = $(this).attr("data-portfolio-id");
$("[data-portfolio-id="+"'"+thisid+"']").on('mouseenter', function(){
$(this).find('.recent-work-item__overlay').removeClass('show-none');
});
$("[data-portfolio-id="+"'"+thisid+"']").on('mouseleave',function(){
$(this).find('.recent-work-item__overlay').addClass('show-none');
});
});
Here look at my codepen
Here I have added an example that shows how you could use CSS to show/hide elements. It might not give you exact answer to your problem, but it will help you change your stylesheets as per your requirement.
Essentially, as per the discussion in comments, I don't think you need javascript to design the page the way you need it.
.container {
padding: 10px;
border: 1px solid gray;
}
.container > .hideOnHover {
display: block;
}
.container > .showOnHover {
display: none;
}
.container:hover > .hideOnHover {
display: none;
}
.container:hover > .showOnHover {
display: block;
}
<div class="container">
<div class="hideOnHover">
This text will be hidden on hover.
</div>
<div class="showOnHover">
This text will be shown on hover.
</div>
</div>
A previous developer built a webpage with a woman and numbers on it to click for to show services related to a bodypart. You can see the current page here...
http://dermanaissance.com/nos-solutions/
My issue here is that he built the solution with CSS VS using JS or Jquery. I'm trying to hide the other blocks when a specific block has been clicked using what he's already done but am afraid isn't possible only using CSS.
I'm not quite sure how to tackle this one without using Jquery as this is usually how I would approach this, any ideas?
This is the code right now...
<div id="anchor-1" class="nos-anchor">1
<span class="nos-block">
<span class="nos-line"> </span>
<ul>
<li>Lift Sans Chirurgie</li>
<li>Atténuation des Rides</li>
<li>Contour des Yeux</li>
<li>Double-menton</li>
<li>Bajoues</li>
<li>Relâchement du Cou</li>
<li>Ouverture du Regard</li>
<li>Augmentation du Volume</li>
<li>Amélioration du Teint de la Peau</li>
<li>Acné Active</li>
<li>Cicatrices d’Acné</li>
<li>Décolleté</li>
<li>Atténuation des Cicatrices</li>
<li>Photorajeunissement</li>
<li><a href="/taches-pigmentaires-et-melasma/">
Taches pigmentaires et Mélasma</a></li>
<li>Couperose et Rosacée</li>
<li>Varicosités</li>
</ul>
</span>
</div>
and the CSS that makes this solution work...
.page-id-9 #main-content .nos-anchor {
position: absolute;
display: block;
z-index: 9;}
.page-id-9 #main-content .nos-anchor .nos-block {
position: absolute;
display: none;}
.page-id-9 #main-content .nos-anchor .nos-block a {
display: block;}
.page-id-9 #main-content .nos-anchor .nos-line {
display: block;
position: absolute;
top: 20px;}
If you want a pure CSS solution I suggest looking into the Target psuedo element, otherwise -
Here is a pure javascript solution. Just give the divs you are hiding and showing an ID, and call them with the clickable object using onclick="hideShow(sectionID);"
<div style="height:40px; width:40px; background:red;" onclick="hideShow('div1')">
<div id="div1" style="display:none; background:orange; width:15px; height:15px;"></div>
</div>
<div style="width:40px; height:40px; background:yellow;" onclick="hideShow('div2')">
<div id="div2" style="display:none; background:green; width:15px; height:15px;"></div>
<div></div>
</div>
<div style="width:40px; height:40px; background:blue;" onclick="hideShow('div3')">
<div id="div3" style="display:none; background:purple; width:15px; height:15px;"></div>
<div></div>
</div>
var currrentElementShowing;
function hideShow(sectionID) {
if (document.getElementById(sectionID) != currrentElementShowing) {
document.getElementById(sectionID).style.display = "block";
if (currrentElementShowing != undefined) {
currrentElementShowing.style.display = "none";
}
currrentElementShowing = document.getElementById(sectionID);
} else {
}
}
https://jsfiddle.net/cxjndqzu/
Wow "page-id-9" is pretty terrible naming convention (I know you didn't do it, but MAN!).
So, what I would do is create two CSS classes:
"ToggleClass"
"Active"
You would assign "ToggleClass" to all of your list items. Using CSS, you make "ToggleClass" items that ALSO have the "Active" class display how you would like. "ToggleClass" items WITHOUT the "Active" class would be hidden as you would like.
Then, using jQuery (sorry, but I think it has to be done), make the following function:
$(document).ready(function(){
$(".ToggleClass").on("click", function(){
$(".ToggleClass").removeClass("Active");
$(this).addClass("Active");
});
});
This event will fire anytime someone clicks a "ToggleClass" element. First, it removes the "Active" class from ALL elements that have "ToggleClass" (this ensures that you won't simultaneously have two elements with the "Active" class). Next, it adds the "Active" class to the element that was clicked.
Leave a comment and let me know how this works for you - Good luck!
Having looked at your page, you could apply something like this. You'll have to use pure Javascript or Jquery. Since you mentioned JQuery as your preference:
html
<div>
<div class="pill">1</div>
</div>
<div>
<div class="pill">2</div>
</div>
js
$('.pill').click(function(){
$(this).toggleClass('active')
if ($(this).hasClass('active')){
$('.pill').not(this).fadeOut(200)
}else{
$('.pill').not(this).fadeIn(200)
}
});
The idea here is to use Jquery's toggleClass method and to check whether the click element has the active class, and if it does hide the other elements. This should steer you in the right direction
Fiddle
I have a parent <div>, #amwcontentwrapper, which has a series of divs within it with their own classes and ids.
I want to use jQuery to select these child divs, and IF they have the class .amwhidden, do nothing, but if not, remove the .amwshown class and add the .amwhidden class.
This is what I have so far, but it is not working. I think it may be my selecting of the child divs within the parent.
Can anybody see any obvious problems? Thanks for your help.
if ($('#amwcontentwrapper > div').hasClass('amwhidden')){
} else {
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div').fadeIn(600, function(){
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div').removeClass('amwshown');
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div').addClass('amwhidden');
});
}
And here is the basic html that I am using:
<div class="amwshown" id="amwintro">
Intro Section, which should have the 'amwshown' class removed, and the
'amwhidden' class added, when the jQuery runs. Currently, this does not happen.
</div>
UPDATE: Using War10ck's solution in the comments below (i.e. $('#amwcontentwrapper > div.amwshown')) I have managed to get the classes changing as I wished. However, those which have had the .amwshown class removed and .amwhidden class added still show on the page, despite the CSS looking like this:
.amwhidden {
display:none;
}
.amwshown {
display:block;
}
Looking at the Dev Tools, it seems that, when the jQuery is run (on a click event) the classes are changing, but any classes which are having the .amwshown class added (thus displaying them on the page) are also having the a <style> tag added to them which makes them display:block;
When I then press another button, which should hide the aformentioned <div> to make way for another one, the class is being changed to .amwhidden, but that <style> tag is not being deleted, so even though it has the .amwhidden class, it is still on the page.
I've created a JSFiddle here, if anybody still wants to help!
`
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#buybutton').click(function() {
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div.amwshown').fadeIn(600, function() {
$(this).removeClass('amwshown').addClass('amwhidden');
});
if ($('#amwbuy').hasClass('amwshown')) {} else {
$('#amwbuy').fadeIn(600, function() {
$('#amwbuy').removeClass('amwhidden');
$('#amwbuy').addClass('amwshown');
});
}
});
$('#phdbutton').click(function() {
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div.amwshown').fadeIn(600, function() {
$(this).removeClass('amwshown').addClass('amwhidden');
});
if ($('#amwphd').hasClass('amwshown')) {} else {
$('#amwphd').fadeIn(600, function() {
$('#amwphd').removeClass('amwhidden');
$('#amwphd').addClass('amwshown');
});
}
});
});
#sidebar {
position: absolute;
left: 1%;
top: 1%;
font-size: 5em;
color: #000000;
width: 10%;
display: block;
background-color: red;
}
#amwcontentwrapper {
position: absolute;
left: 20%;
top: 5%;
}
.amwshown {
display: block;
}
.amwhidden {
display: none;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="amwsidebar">
<span class="sidebarbutton" id="phdbutton">PhD Button</span>
<br />
<br />
<span class="sidebarbutton" id="buybutton">Buy Button</span>
</div>
<div id="amwcontentwrapper">
<div class="amwshown" id="amwintro">
<p>An intro section to welcome the visitor. Disappears when one of the other sections is clicked.</p>
<br />
<br />
</div>
<div class="amwhidden" id="amwbuy">
Buy Section
</div>
<div class="amwhidden" id="amwphd">
PhD Section
</div>
</div>
`
You can use not to remove the elements you do not want, like this:
$('#amwcontentwrapper > div').not('.amwhidden')
.removeClass('amwshown')
.addClass('amwhidden');
And work with that.
Try this
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#amwcontentwrapper").children().each(function(elem, x) {
if ($(x).attr("class") == "amwhidden") {
alert($(x).attr("class"));
$(x).removeClass("amwhidden").addClass("amwshow");
alert($(x).attr("class"));
}
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="amwcontentwrapper">
<div class="amwhidden"></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
</div>
You can try each as follow,
$("#amwcontentwrapper div").each(function(){
if($(this).hasClass('amwhidden'))
//DO something
else
//DO something
});
Thank you for all help, it has prompted some brainstorming which has solved this issue.
Instead of adding the .amwhidden class and removing the .amwhidden class using jQuery, I have just created a .amwsection class, which all the sections belong to which has an initial display value of none. So far, so good; all of the sections are not there when you load up the page.
Then I use the .css jQuery function to change the display:none to display:block when the corresponding button is clicked, and changing all other .amwsections to display:none. This works just fine, but the effect is quite abrupt; there is no fading in, as you would get if you used the .animate function. .animate, however, does not work with the display value.
.fadeOut and .fadeIn to the rescue! By wrapping the .css change in these, I can create a fading in/out effect and can still use the display value.
Here is one example of this code.
The #buybutton is the button to be pressed.
#amwintro is just something which appears when the page loads - it will now be set to display:none if this is the first button pressed.
The .amwsection are all of the hidden sections. This portion of the code just resets all of them. This and the #amwintro section happen very quickly (1/100th of a second) to keep response time good.
The #amwbuy is the specific section that I want to reveal. As you can see, this fades in over a longer period.
Currently only tested in Chrome, but I think I've got it!
$(document).ready(function () {
$('#buybutton').click(function() {
$('#amwintro').fadeOut(1, function() {
$(this).css({
display:'none',
});
});
$('.amwsection').fadeOut(1, function() {
$(this).css({
display:'none',
});
});
$('#amwbuy').fadeIn(600, function() {
$(this).css({
display:'block',
});
});
});
});
I am taking a fairly old site and making it responsive. The developer setup the "nav" like below, no list or anything. The mobile nav will be vertical and I don't want the "|" character. I want to do this without touching the nav HTML or adding a second menu to show on smaller screens.
<div id="mainNav">
Home|
About|
Areas of Practice|
In the News|
Contact
</div>
I've tried this line of jQuery, but it seems to remove the tags as well as the "|", leaving a string of "HomeAboutAreas of PracticeIn the NewsContact". How would I only remove the "|" and leave everything else as is?
$('#mainNav').text(function(index,text){
return text.replace(/[|]/g,'');
});
Use .html instead of .text so you keep the HTML.
There's also no need to use [] in the regexp when you're just replacing one character. However, you need to escape the pipe character outside a character set, since it means alternation.
$("#doit").click(function() {
$('#mainNav').html(function(index, text) {
return text.replace(/\|/g, '');
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="mainNav">
Home|
About|
Areas of Practice|
In the News|
Contact
</div>
<button id="doit">Remove pipes</button>
Can do this with css alone by setting parent font-size to zero and setting the children font size to whatever your default is
#mainNav { font-size:0; }
#mainNav a { font-size:14px; }
DEMO
And for a javascript solution that doesn't replace the elements ( and possibly events bound to them) you can remove the text nodes using:
$('#mainNav').contents().filter(function(){
return this.nodeType === 3;
}).remove();
DEMO 2
Put the 'pipe' characters in a separate <span> elemenet which you then hide using CSS media queries
HTML:
Areas of Practice <span>|</span>
CSS
#media (max-width: 320px) {
.mainNav a span {
display: none;
}
}
Or you can just give a border-right:1px solid black to your a elements which you will then revert to 0px; using media queries - This completely ditches the | characters and uses plain CSS to achieve your intended result
#mainNav a{
padding:2px;
border-right:1px solid black;
}
#media (max-width: 600px) {
#mainNav a{
border-right:0px solid black;
}
}
<div id="mainNav">
Home
About
Areas of Practice
In the News
<a href="/contact">Contact</a
</div>
Demo: https://jsfiddle.net/erkaner/6mtafkek/1/
You can retrieve only the links and append them back to the div:
var links = $('#mainNav a');
$('#mainNav').html('').append(links );
a{
margin-right:5px;
}
Try this:
$('#mainNav').html(function(index,text){
return text.replace(/[|]/g,'');
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="mainNav">
Home|
About|
Areas of Practice|
In the News|
Contact
</div>
How could I make it so that given two elements let's say these boxes:
If I clicked over one, it would grow, and the other would shrink like and vice versa:
How can I do this?
I have seen this sort of done with CSS, using the focus tag and adjusting the width. But I have two problems there, first how could I affect the other element, and second as far as I can tell adjusting width will only stretch them right. I have seen people change the way they float the elements to deal with that, but I don't want to move them around the page to do this.
Here are 2 examples without Javascript/jQuery:
Pure CSS - Trigger on click: (example)
Using the checkbox hack in CSS you can effectively toggle the widths of the elements when the checkbox is :checked. Here is what part of the CSS looks like:
input[type=checkbox]:checked ~ .red {
width:70%;
}
input[type=checkbox]:checked ~ .green {
width:20%;
}
Go to the example for the full CSS.
HTML
<input type="checkbox" id="toggle" />
<div class="red">
<label for="toggle"></label>
</div>
<div class="green">
<label for="toggle"></label>
</div>
You might also be interested in the original example I made. It takes a different approach, though it doesn't fully work.
Pure CSS - Trigger on hover: (example)
Unfortunately, neither the adjacent selector, nor the general sibling selector can select previous elements, therefore it makes this a little difficult. I placed 2 general elements before the main elements in order to somewhat solve this issue.
.greenS:hover, .greenS:hover ~ .green,
.redS:hover, .redS:hover ~ .red {
width:72%;
}
.greenS:hover ~ .redS, .greenS:hover ~ .red,
.redS:hover ~ .greenS, .redS:hover ~ .green {
width:22%;
}
HTML
<div class="redS"></div><div class="greenS"></div>
<div class="red"></div>
<div class="green"></div>
Since this was tagged as JS/jQuery, here are 2 alternative solutions.
JS/jQuery - Trigger on click: (example)
$('.red, .green').click(function(){
$('.red').toggleClass('expanded')
.next('.green').toggleClass('contracted');
});
JS/jQuery - Trigger on hover: (example)
$('.red').hover(function(){
$(this).toggleClass('expanded')
.next('.green').toggleClass('contracted');
});
$('.green').hover(function(){
$(this).toggleClass('expanded')
.prev('.red').toggleClass('contracted');
});
See jQuery .animate() method documentation.
Example on jsfiddle:
.box {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
display: inline-block;
}
#box1 {
background: red;
}
#box2 {
background: blue;
}
<div class="box" id="box1"></div>
<div class="box" id="box2"></div>
$('.box').click(function() {
var currentWidth = $(this).outerWidth(),
siblingCurrentWidth = $(this).siblings('.box').outerWidth();
$(this).animate({'width' : currentWidth/2})
.siblings('.box').animate({'width' : siblingCurrentWidth*2});
});
This is a very simple example with several flaws, but it demonstrates a possibility for what your purpose is.
Simple example http://jsfiddle.net/PeLub/ ( modify how you need) .
<div class="box" id="first"></div>
<div class="box" id="second"></div>
$("#first").click(function(){
$(this).animate({width:'50px'}, 500);
$("#second").animate({width:'150px'}, 500);
});
$("#second").click(function(){
$(this).animate({width:'50px'}, 500);
$("#first").animate({width:'150px'}, 500);
});