Reputation: 4362
I would like to show a div when someone hovers over an <a>
element, but I would like to do this in CSS and not JavaScript. Do you know how this can be achieved?
Upvotes: 372
Views: 944435
Reputation: 8985
please test this code
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">
div
{
display:none;
color:black
width:100px;
height:100px;
background:white;
animation:myfirst 9s;
-moz-animation:myfirst 9s; /* Firefox */
-webkit-animation:myfirst 5s; /* Safari and Chrome */
}
@keyframes myfirst
{
0% {background:blue;}
25% {background:yellow;}
50% {background:blue;}
100% {background:green;}
}
@-moz-keyframes myfirst /* Firefox */
{
0% {background:white;}
50% {background:blue;}
100% {background:green;}
}
@-webkit-keyframes myfirst /* Safari and Chrome */
{
0% {background:red;}
25% {background:yellow;}
50% {background:blue;}
100% {background:green;}
}
a:hover + div{
display:inline;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<a href="#">Hover over me!</a>
<div>the color is changing now</div>
<div></div>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 465
I'm by no means an expert, but I'm incredibly proud of myself for having worked something out about this code. If you do:
div {
display: none;
}
a:hover > div {
display: block;
}
Note the >
, a direct child selector.
You can contain the whole thing in an a tag, then, as long as your trigger (which can be in it's own div, or straight up in the a tag, or anything you want) is physically touching the revealed div, you can move your mouse from one to the other.
Maybe this isn't useful for a great deal, but I had to set my revealed div to overflow: auto, so sometimes it had scroll bars, which couldn't be used as soon as you move away from the div.
In fact, after finally working out how to make the revealed div, (although it is now a child of the trigger, not a sibling), sit behind the trigger, in terms of z-index, (with a little help from this page: How to get a parent element to appear above child) you don't even have to roll over the revealed div to scroll it, just stay hovering over the trigger and use your wheel, or whatever.
My revealed div covers most of the page, so this technique makes it a lot more permanent, rather than the screen flashing from one state to another with every move of the mouse. It's really intuitive actually, hence why I'm really quite proud of myself.
The only downside is that you can't put links within the whole thing, but you can use the whole thing as one big link.
Upvotes: 40
Reputation: 63
If you follow this method, element will appear even if you hover over the hidden element. This will be useful if you want to click on the hidden element. For an example you might want to see a delete option and then click on it.
<style>
#delete_link {
display: none;
}
a:hover + #delete_link {
display: block;
}
#delete_link:hover{
display: block;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<a>Hover over me!</a>
<div id="delete_link"><a href="#">Element show on hover</a></div>
</body>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 92347
The +
allow 'select' only first not nested element , the >
select nested elements only - the better is to use ~
which allow to select arbitrary element which is child of parent hovered element. Using opacity/width and transition you can provide smooth appear
div { transition: all 1s }
.ccc, .ggg { opacity: 0; color: red}
.ccc { height: 0 }
.aaa:hover ~ .bbb .ccc { opacity: 1; height: 34px }
.aaa:hover ~ .eee .fff .ggg { opacity: 1 }
<div class="aaa">Hover me... to see<br><br> </div>
<div class='bbb'>BBBBB
<div class='ccc'>CCCCC
<div class='ddd'>DDDDD</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class='eee'>EEEEE
<div class='fff'>FFFFF
<div class='ggg'>GGGGG</div>
<div class='hhh'>HHHHH</div>
</div>
</div>
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 922
Don't forget. if you are trying to hover around an image, you have to put it around a container. css:
.brand:hover + .brand-sales {
display: block;
}
.brand-sales {
display: none;
}
If you hover on this:
<span className="brand">
<img src="https://murmure.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/nike-square-1900x1900.jpg"
alt"some image class="product-card-place-logo"/>
</span>
This will show:
<div class="product-card-sales-container brand-sales">
<div class="product-card-">Message from the business goes here. They can talk alot or not</div>
</div>
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 5722
.showme {
display: none;
}
.showhim:hover .showme {
display: block;
}
<div class="showhim">HOVER ME
<div class="showme">hai</div>
</div>
Since this answer is popular I think a small explanation is needed. Using this method when you hover on the internal element, it wont disappear. Because the .showme is inside .showhim it will not disappear when you move your mouse between the two lines of text (or whatever it is).
These are example of quirqs you need to take care of when implementing such behavior.
It all depends what you need this for. This method is better for a menu style scenario, while Yi Jiang's is better for tooltips.
Upvotes: 324
Reputation: 2970
HTML
<div>
<h4>Show content</h4>
</div>
<div>
<p>Hello World</p>
</div>
CSS
div+div {
display: none;
}
div:hover +div {
display: block;
}
CodePen :hover on div show text in another div
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 46341
Based on the main answer, this is an example, useful to display an information tooltip when clicking on a ?
near a link:
document.onclick = function() { document.getElementById("tooltip").style.display = 'none'; };
document.getElementById("tooltip").onclick = function(e) { e.stopPropagation(); }
document.getElementById("help").onclick = function(e) { document.getElementById("tooltip").style.display = 'block';
e.stopPropagation(); };
#help { opacity: 0; margin-left: 0.1em; padding: 0.4em; }
a:hover + #help, #help:hover { opacity: 0.5; cursor: pointer; }
#tooltip { border: 1px solid black; display: none; padding: 0.75em; width: 50%; text-align: center; font-family: sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; }
<a href="">Delete all obsolete informations</a><span id="help">?</span>
<div id="tooltip">All data older than 2 weeks will be deleted.</div>
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 543
From my testing using this CSS:
.expandable{
display: none;
}
.expand:hover+.expandable{
display:inline !important;
}
.expandable:hover{
display:inline !important;
}
And this HTML:
<div class="expand">expand</div>
<div class="expand">expand</div>
<div class="expandable">expandable</div>
, it resulted that it does expand using the second , but does not expand using the first one. So if there is a div between the hover target and the hidden div, then it will not work.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 306
For me, if I want to interact with the hidden div without seeing it disappear each time I leave the triggering element (a in that case) I must add:
div:hover {
display: block;
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 411
This answer doesn't require that you know the what type of display (inline, etc.) the hideable element is supposed to be when being shown:
.hoverable:not(:hover) + .show-on-hover {
display: none;
}
<a class="hoverable">Hover over me!</a>
<div class="show-on-hover">I'm a block element.</div>
<hr />
<a class="hoverable">Hover over me also!</a>
<span class="show-on-hover">I'm an inline element.</span>
This uses the adjacent sibling selector and the not selector.
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 1158
I found using opacity is better, it allows you to add css3 transitions to make a nice finished hover effect. The transitions will just be dropped by older IE browsers, so it degrades gracefully to.
#stuff {
opacity: 0.0;
-webkit-transition: all 500ms ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all 500ms ease-in-out;
-ms-transition: all 500ms ease-in-out;
-o-transition: all 500ms ease-in-out;
transition: all 500ms ease-in-out;
}
#hover {
width:80px;
height:20px;
background-color:green;
margin-bottom:15px;
}
#hover:hover + #stuff {
opacity: 1.0;
}
<div id="hover">Hover</div>
<div id="stuff">stuff</div>
Upvotes: 49
Reputation: 50095
You can do something like this:
div {
display: none;
}
a:hover + div {
display: block;
}
<a>Hover over me!</a>
<div>Stuff shown on hover</div>
This uses the adjacent sibling selector, and is the basis of the suckerfish dropdown menu.
HTML5 allows anchor elements to wrap almost anything, so in that case the div
element can be made a child of the anchor. Otherwise the principle is the same - use the :hover
pseudo-class to change the display
property of another element.
Upvotes: 622
Reputation: 920
I would like to offer this general purpose template solution that expands on the correct solution provided by Yi Jiang's.
The additional benefits include:
In the html you place the following structure:
<div class="information_popup_container">
<div class="information">
<!-- The thing or things you want to hover over go here such as images, tables,
paragraphs, objects other divisions etc. -->
</div>
<div class="popup_information">
<!-- The thing or things you want to popup go here such as images, tables,
paragraphs, objects other divisions etc. -->
</div>
</div>
In the css you place the following structure:
div.information_popup_container {
position: absolute;
width:0px;
height:0px;
/* Position Information */
/* Appearance Information */
}
div.information_popup_container > div.information {
/* Position Information */
/* Appearance Information */
}
div.information_popup_container > div.popup_information {
position: fixed;
visibility: hidden;
/* Position Information */
/* Appearance Information */
}
div.information_popup_container > div.information:hover + div.popup_information {
visibility: visible;
z-index: 200;
}
As additional information. When the popup contains information that you might want to cut and paste or contains an object that you might want to interact with then first replace:
div.information_popup_container > div.information:hover + div.popup_information {
visibility: visible;
z-index: 200;
}
with
div.information_popup_container > div.information:hover + div.popup_information
,div.information_popup_container > div.popup_information:hover {
visibility: visible;
z-index: 200;
}
And second, adjust the position of div.popup so that there is an overlap with div.information. A few pixels is sufficient to ensure that the div.popup is can receive the hover when moving the cusor off div.information.
This does not work as expected with Internet Explorer 10.0.9200 and does work as expected with Opera 12.16, Firefox 18.0 and Google Chrome 28.0.15.
See fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/F68Le/ for a complete example with a popup multilevel menu.
Upvotes: 15