I want to turn down the opacity on an element when a user performs an action.
The current code I have is:
document.getElementById('MyOpaqueElement').style.opacity = 0.3;
// There are checks in the real code for NULL, etc.
This works on Firefox, Safari, etc. IE8 has different ideas about opacity. I have read a couple of articles but have yet to find a definitive answer on the most portable method to do开发者_Go百科 this in a cross-browser way.
There are various browsers-specific settings and notations you need to take into consideration.
See Quirksmode.org: CSS2 - Opacity
I suggest using a Framework like JQuery, Prototype, MooTools or Dojo. I know it seems ridiculous to add dozens of kilobytes of code just for some opacity at first, but it's really worth it. It just works in one way for all browsers.
EDIT- Poster is using jquery..
Easy way:
$(el).css('opacity', '0.3');
(I checked the jquery sources, and it handles opacity for cross-browser compatibility automatically, so that should work)
Or for a CSS solution: Just give it a class, e.g. 'transparent', and add this to your CSS file:
.transparent {
filter: alpha(opacity=30); /* for IE */
-khtml-opacity: 0.3; /* khtml, old safari */
-moz-opacity: 0.3; /* old mozilla, netscape */
opacity: 0.3; /* good browsers: FF, safari, opera */
}
The equivalent should be document.getElementById('MyOpaqueElement').style.filter = 'alpha(opacity=30)';
By the way, even if you don't use a library like YUI or JQuery, you can download them and search their sources for the word
opacity
.
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