The page I am working on has a javascript function executed to print parts of the page. For some reason, printing in Safari, causes the window to somehow update. I say somehow, because it does not really refresh as in reload the page, but rather it starts the "rendering" of the page from start, i.e. scroll to top, flash animations start from 0, and so forth. The effect is reproduced by this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/fYmnB/ Clicking the print button and finishing or cancelling a print in Safari causes the screen to "go white" for a sec, which in my real website manifests itself as something "like" a reload. While running print button with, let's say, Firefox, just opens and closes the print dialogue without affecting the fiddle page in any way. Is there something with my way of calling the browsers print method that causes this, or how can it be explained - and preferably, avoided? P.S.: On my real site the same occurs with Chrome. In the ex
Well, .hover() binds two handlers for the events mouseenter and mouseleave, so it is a more convenient way and also easier to understand the purpose.
ReplyDeletemouseenter differs from mouseover so far as mouseenter is not fired if the cursor is over/enters a child element of the element the handler is bound to.
It is only fired once, when the cursors enters the element. mouseover is always fired, even if the cursor is over a child element.
The best way to see the difference is to have a look at the example of mouseleave().
Furthermore, mouseover and mouseout are real JavaScript events whereas mouseenter and mouseleave are events provided by jQuery (afaik).
In the end, it depends on what you want to achieve. There is no right or wrong and all these methods have their purpose. Unless you show some code, there is not much more to say.
If you mean :hover in CSS and you can achieve the desired effect with it, go for it. If there is a non-JS solution for a certain problem, always choose this one.
hover just saves you from having to do both a mouseenter and a mouseleave by doing both in one function.
ReplyDeletei prefer use css hover, because seems that I write less code to do the same.
ReplyDeleteThey're the same, except hover handles both mouseenter and mouseleave
ReplyDeleteSee: http://api.jquery.com/hover/
So you can use it like this
$('selector').hover(function () {
// Do stuff on mouse enter
}, function () {
// Do other stuff on mouse leave
}
)
Since you are learning, here is another equivalent to using hover:
ReplyDelete$('selector').bind('mouseenter mouseleave', function(){
if (event.type == "mouseenter") {
// MouseEnter code
} else {
// MouseLeave code
}
})