Reputation: 6802
When I begin writing text in the textarea, I want the outer div, with a class box, to have its border turned solid instead of dashed, but somehow the :focus doesn't apply in this case. If it works with :active, how come it doesn't work with :focus?
Any ideas why?
(Note. I want the DIV's border to turn solid, NOT the textareas)
div.box
{
width: 300px;
height: 300px;
border: thin dashed black;
}
div.box:focus{
border: thin solid black;
}
<div class="box">
<textarea rows="10" cols="25"></textarea>
</div>
Upvotes: 113
Views: 220816
Reputation: 1
You can use **:focus-within**
to give style to outer div
whenever an inner element is focused.
Another way to do that is to add **tabIndex**
to a div
. Then you can easily give **:focus**
to just a div
.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 125443
Other posters have already explained why the :focus
pseudo class is insufficient, but finally there is a CSS-based standard solution.
CSS Selectors Level 4 defines a new pseudo class:
From MDN:
The
:focus-within
CSS pseudo-class matches any element that the:focus
pseudo-class matches or that has a descendant that the:focus
pseudo-class matches. (This includes descendants in shadow trees.)
So now with the :focus-within
pseudo class - styling the outer div when the textarea
gets clicked becomes trivial.
.box:focus-within {
border: thin solid black;
}
.box {
width: 300px;
height: 300px;
border: 5px dashed red;
}
.box:focus-within {
border: 5px solid green;
}
<p>The outer box border changes when the textarea gets focus.</p>
<div class="box">
<textarea rows="10" cols="25"></textarea>
</div>
NB: Browser Support : Chrome (60+), Firefox and Safari
Upvotes: 194
Reputation: 1201
This can now be achieve through the css method :focus-within
as examplified in this post: http://www.scottohara.me/blog/2017/05/14/focus-within.html
/*
A normal (though ugly) focus
pseudo-class. Any element that
can receive focus within the
.my-element parent will receive
a yellow background.
*/
.my-element *:focus {
background: yellow !important;
color: #000;
}
/*
The :focus-within pseudo-class
will NOT style the elements within
the .my-element selector, like the
normal :focus above, but will
style the .my-element container
when its focusable children
receive focus.
*/
.my-element:focus-within {
outline: 3px solid #333;
}
<div class="my-element">
<p>A paragraph</p>
<p>
<a href="http://scottohara.me">
My Website
</a>
</p>
<label for="wut_email">
Your email:
</label>
<input type="email" id="wut_email" />
</div>
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 437346
As per the spec:
The
:focus
pseudo-class applies while an element has the focus (accepts keyboard events or other forms of text input).
The <div>
does not accept input, so it cannot have :focus
. Furthermore, CSS does not allow you to set styles on an element based on targeting its descendants. So you can't really do this unless you are willing to use JavaScript.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 131
You can tab between div tags. Just add a tab index to the div. It's best to use jQuery and CSS classes to solve this problem. Here's a working sample tested in IE, Firefox, and Chrome (Latest versions... didn't test older).
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var divParentIdFocus;
var divParentIdUnfocus = null;
$(document).ready(function() {
$("div").focus(function() {
//$(this).attr("class", "highlight");
var curDivId = $(this).attr("id");
// This Check needs to be performed when/if div regains focus
// from child element.
if (divParentIdFocus != curDivId){
divParentIdUnfocus = divParentIdFocus;
divParentIdFocus = curDivId;
refreshHighlight();
}
divParentIdFocus = curDivId;
});
$("textarea").focus(function(){
var curDivId = $(this).closest("div").attr("id");
if(divParentIdFocus != curDivId){
divParentIdUnfocus = divParentIdFocus;
divParentIdFocus = curDivId;
refreshHighlight();
}
});
$("#div1").focus();
});
function refreshHighlight()
{
if(divParentIdUnfocus != null){
$("#" +divParentIdUnfocus).attr("class", "noHighlight");
divParentIdUnfocus = null;
}
$("#" + divParentIdFocus).attr("class", "highlight");
}
</script>
<style type="text/css">
.highlight{
background-color:blue;
border: 3px solid black;
font-weight:bold;
color: white;
}
.noHighlight{
}
div, h1,textarea, select { outline: none; }
</style>
<head>
<body>
<div id = "div1" tabindex="100">
<h1>Div 1</h1> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="101">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="102">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="103">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="104">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
</div>
<div id = "div2" tabindex="200">
<h1>Div 2</h1> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="201">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="202">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="203">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="204">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
</div>
<div id = "div3" tabindex="300">
<h1>Div 3</h1> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="301">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="302">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="303">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="304">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
</div>
<div id = "div4" tabindex="400">
<h1>Div 4</h1> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="401">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="402">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="403">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
<textarea rows="2" cols="25" tabindex="404">~Your Text Here~</textarea> <br />
</div>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 7522
DIV
elements can get focus if set the tabindex
attribute. Here is the working example.
#focus-example > .extra {
display: none;
}
#focus-example:focus > .extra {
display: block;
}
<div id="focus-example" tabindex="0">
<div>Focus me!</div>
<div class="extra">Hooray!</div>
</div>
For more information about focus
and blur
, you can check out this article.
Update:
And here is another example using focus
to create a menu
.
#toggleMenu:focus {
outline: none;
}
button:focus + .menu {
display: block;
}
.menu {
display: none;
}
.menu:focus {
display: none;
}
<div id="toggleMenu" tabindex="0">
<button type="button">Menu</button>
<ul class="menu" tabindex="1">
<li>Home</li>
<li>About Me</li>
<li>Contacts</li>
</ul>
</div>
Upvotes: 94
Reputation: 87
Simple use JQuery.
$(document).ready(function() {
$("div .FormRow").focusin(function() {
$(this).css("background-color", "#FFFFCC");
$(this).css("border", "3px solid #555");
});
$("div .FormRow").focusout(function() {
$(this).css("background-color", "#FFFFFF");
$(this).css("border", "0px solid #555");
});
});
.FormRow {
padding: 10px;
}
<html>
<head>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<div style="border: 0px solid black;padding:10px;">
<div class="FormRow">
First Name:
<input type="text">
<br>
</div>
<div class="FormRow">
Last Name:
<input type="text">
</div>
</div>
<ul>
<li><strong><em>Click an input field to get focus.</em></strong>
</li>
<li><strong><em>Click outside an input field to lose focus.</em></strong>
</li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 253308
While this can't be achieved with CSS/HTML alone, it can be achieved with JavaScript (without need of a library):
var textareas = document.getElementsByTagName('textarea');
for (i=0;i<textareas.length;i++){
// you can omit the 'if' if you want to style the parent node regardless of its
// element type
if (textareas[i].parentNode.tagName.toString().toLowerCase() == 'div') {
textareas[i].onfocus = function(){
this.parentNode.style.borderStyle = 'solid';
}
textareas[i].onblur = function(){
this.parentNode.style.borderStyle = 'dashed';
}
}
}
Incidentally, with a library, such as jQuery, the above could be condensed down to:
$('textarea').focus(
function(){
$(this).parent('div').css('border-style','solid');
}).blur(
function(){
$(this).parent('div').css('border-style','dashed');
});
References:
getElementsByTagName()
.onfocus
.onblur
.parentNode
.tagName
.toString()
.toLowerCase()
.style
.focus()
.blur()
.parent()
.css()
.Upvotes: 45
Reputation: 4659
As far as I am aware you have to use javascript to travel up the dom.
Something like this:
$("textarea:focus").parent().attr("border", "thin solid black");
you'll need the jQuery libraries loaded as well.
Upvotes: 0