Thanks to Perfection kills, we can use the following JavaScript to detect event support:
function hasEvent(ev) {
var elem = document.createElement('a'),
type = 'on' + ev,
supported = elem[type] !== undefined;
if (!supported) {
elem.setA开发者_如何学编程ttribute(type, 'return;');
supported = typeof elem[type] === 'function';
}
elem = null;
return supported;
}
This works for about the only time I need it: detecting mouseenter
support; hasEvent('mouseenter')
will return false in Chrome, Firefox, etc., as it should.
But now I'm trying to "fix" browsers that don't support the focusin
and focusout
events. According to PPK, that's basically just Firefox. Unfortunately, Chrome and Safari are listed as having "incomplete" support, for the following reason:
Safari and Chrome fire these events only with addEventListener; not with traditional registration.
In general, that's fine; I'd only be using addEventListener
anyway. It does mean, however, that detecting support via elem.onfocusin !== undefined
won't work. I tested it out, and it's true:
<p>Do I support <a href="#">focusin</a>?</p>
<script>
var elem = document.getElementsByTagName('p')[0];
// hasEvent method defined here
function listener() {
var response = hasEvent('focusin') ? 'Yes!' : 'No...';
alert(response);
}
elem.addEventListener('focusin', listener, false);
</script>
The above alerts No...
in Chrome! Is there any way to detect whether the browser supports focusin
, without using browser sniffing?
focusin & focusout should be fired BEFORE target element receives focus, event order is also seems buggy
http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-3-Events/#events-focusevent-event-order
currently, only IE works according to spec:
Chrome/Safari:
focus
focusin
DOMFocusIn
blur
focusout
DOMFocusOut
focus
focusin
DOMFocusIn
Opera 12:
focus
DOMFocusIn
focusin
blur
DOMFocusOut
focusout
focus
DOMFocusIn
focusin
IE 8:
focusin
focus
focusout
focusin
blur
focus
Firefox 14:
focus
blur
focus
This uses the fact that calling focus()
triggers focusin
: http://jsfiddle.net/pimvdb/YXeD3/.
The element must be visible and inserted into the DOM, otherwise focusin
is not fired for some reason.
var result = (function() {
var hasIt = false;
function swap() {
hasIt = true; // when fired, set hasIt to true
}
var a = document.createElement('a'); // create test element
a.href = "#"; // to make it focusable
a.addEventListener('focusin', swap, false); // bind focusin
document.body.appendChild(a); // append
a.focus(); // focus
document.body.removeChild(a); // remove again
return hasIt; // should be true if focusin is fired
})();
You can test for ("onfocusin" in document)
.
This method has the advantage of being light and unobtrusive and it will tell you whether the browser supports the (not on Chrome, sorry) focusin
event.
You may use the following code to get the same behaviour as the focusin
event on all browsers (IE9+, Chrome, Firefox, Edge):
var eventName, useCapture;
if ("onfocusin" in document) {
eventName = "focusin";
useCapture = false;
} else {
eventName = "focus";
useCapture = true;
}
document.body.addEventListener(eventName, function( event ) {
event.target.style.background = "pink";
}, useCapture);
JS fiddle here: https://jsfiddle.net/d306qm92/2/
More information about the Firefox workaround here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/focus#Event_delegation
UPDATE: As said above, the test will wrongly say "false" on Chrome, nonetheless the code sample will work as intended as Chrome supports both methods (focusin
and focus
with useCapture
).
精彩评论