I'm trying to make a JavaScript bookmarklet that will act as 开发者_如何学Pythona highlighter, changing the background of selected text on a webpage to yellow when the bookmarklet is pressed.
I'm using the following code to get the selected text, and it works fine, returning the correct string
function getSelText() {
var SelText = '';
if (window.getSelection) {
SelText = window.getSelection();
} else if (document.getSelection) {
SelText = document.getSelection();
} else if (document.selection) {
SelText = document.selection.createRange().text;
}
return SelText;
}
However, when I created a similar function to change the CSS of the selected text using jQuery, it isn't working:
function highlightSelText() {
var SelText;
if (window.getSelection) {
SelText = window.getSelection();
} else if (document.getSelection) {
SelText = document.getSelection();
} else if (document.selection) {
SelText = document.selection.createRange().text;
}
$(SelText).css({'background-color' : 'yellow', 'font-weight' : 'bolder'});
}
Any ideas?
The easiest way to do this is to use execCommand()
, which has a command to change the background colour in all modern browsers.
The following should do what you want on any selection, including ones spanning multiple elements. In non-IE browsers it turns on designMode
, applies a background colour and then switches designMode
off again.
UPDATE
Fixed in IE 9.
function makeEditableAndHighlight(colour) {
var range, sel = window.getSelection();
if (sel.rangeCount && sel.getRangeAt) {
range = sel.getRangeAt(0);
}
document.designMode = "on";
if (range) {
sel.removeAllRanges();
sel.addRange(range);
}
// Use HiliteColor since some browsers apply BackColor to the whole block
if (!document.execCommand("HiliteColor", false, colour)) {
document.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour);
}
document.designMode = "off";
}
function highlight(colour) {
var range, sel;
if (window.getSelection) {
// IE9 and non-IE
try {
if (!document.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour)) {
makeEditableAndHighlight(colour);
}
} catch (ex) {
makeEditableAndHighlight(colour)
}
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.createRange) {
// IE <= 8 case
range = document.selection.createRange();
range.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour);
}
}
Here is a crude example of how it could work. As Zack points out you'll need to be aware of cases where the selection spans multiple elements. This isn't intended to be used as-is, just something to help get ideas flowing. Tested in Chrome.
var selection = window.getSelection();
var text = selection.toString();
var parent = $(selection.focusNode.parentElement);
var oldHtml = parent.html();
var newHtml = oldHtml.replace(text, "<span class='highlight'>"+text+"</span>");
parent.html( newHtml );
To make the highlight stick permanently, I believe you are going to have to wrap the selection in a new DOM element (span
should do), to which you can then attach style properties. I don't know if jQuery can do that for you. Keep in mind that selections can span element boundaries, so in the general case you're going to have to inject a whole bunch of new elements
Have a look at a little example i made at http://www.jsfiddle.net/hbwEE/3/
It does not take into account selections that span multiple elements.. (IE will do but will mess the html a bit ..)
In Firefox, you can use the ::-moz-selection
psuedo-class.
In Webkit, you can use the ::selection
pseudo-class.
I like Tim's answer, it's clean and fast. But it also shuts down the doors to doing any interactions with the highlights.
Inserting inline elements directly around the texts is a bad choice, as they broke the text flow and mess things up in complex situations,
So I suggest a dirty hack that
- calculates the absolute layout of each line of selected text (no matter where they are),
- then insert colored, semi-transparent inline-block elements in the end of the document body.
This chrome extension is an example of how this can be done.
It uses API from this library to get the absolute layout of each selected line.
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