Reputation: 1427
Let me see how well I can explain this. I am working on an index on a website that is in a div that is pushed off of the page via css margin with only part of it showing. When you hover over the part that is showing, the rest slides down into view. This works fine. I already have the transition effect in place for the margin change slide and also a background color change with rgba. It looks very nice.
My question is, the index is around 500px wide and the visible part before hovering is 70px high. So that is a fairly large area of the screen for people to accidentally catch with their mouse hover if they are not trying to display the index div. Is there some way that I can only make part of the initially visible portion of the div activate the hover transition animation to bring the full div into view? Or perhaps someway I can attach a smaller div to this one as a sort of tab, that will bring down the larger div and itself via transition on hover?
I hope this makes sense. Thank you.
Here is the basic idea of the current code:
#index {
position:fixed;
background:rgba(0,0,0,0.3);
width:500px;
height:500px;
top:0;
left:50%;
margin:-430px 0 0 -500px;
transition:0.5s;
-moz-transition:0.5s;
-webkit-transition:0.5s;
-o-transition:0.5s;}
#index:hover {
background:rgba(0,0,0,0.8);
margin:0 0 0 -500px;}
Upvotes: 4
Views: 7089
Reputation: 1
This comes from the position:relative property. I strongly feel that your current div tag has position relative property. Please remove that.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 30135
jsFiddle:
html:
<div id="slider"><div id="trigger"><br></div></div>
js:
$('#trigger').hover(function(){
$(this).parent().animate({'top':0},500);
});
$('#slider').mouseleave(function(){
$(this).animate({'top':-150},500);
});
solution without jQuery:
http://jsfiddle.net/wZ8zX/3/
sorry i usually just browse jquery questions, so i didn't check the tags lol
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 43224
Using only CSS you can use another block, or a pseudo-element to overlay the parts of block where you don't want to have transition, and then, after hover, make z-index for the element with transition bigger than overlaying element, so all the contents of it would be accessible.
Here is a fiddle with an example: http://jsfiddle.net/kizu/Y3px6/1/
Upvotes: 1