I've a <div>
with a background-image that will cha开发者_Go百科nge the background 4 times with a delay of 300ms. I've tried with setTimeout which seems to work correct, but clearTimeout(t); when the mouse moves out fails because the backgrounds continue changing.
$(document).ready(function() {
$(".image").hover(function(){
var obj = $('.image');
$(this).css("background-position", "0 -90");
var t=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -180")}, 300);
var t=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -270")}, 600);
var t=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -360")}, 900);
}, function() {
$(this).css("background-position", "0 0");
clearTimeout(t);
});
});
I would like too to insert to the hover function a way to have a infinite loop until the mouse is released.
Sorry for my school English.
Thanks in advance!
move the t var dec outside of the function. then it will be in the closure.
eg something like this:
$(document).ready(function() {
var t1,t2,t3;
$(".image").hover(function(){
var obj = $('.image');
$(this).css("background-position", "0 -90");
var t1=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -180")}, 300);
var t2=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -270")}, 600);
var t3=setTimeout(function(){obj.css("background-position", "0 -360")}, 900);
}, function() {
$(this).css("background-position", "0 0");
clearTimeout(t1);
clearTimeout(t2);
clearTimeout(t3);
});
});
There are other issues with this code but I'm just answering the question.
Because with this the variable t
is overwritten twice by the two previous setTimeout
s, so only the code for the last setTimeout
is preserved, so when you call clearTimeout
you're only clearing the last setTimeout
.
What you can do is to use three different variables to store this, change to setInterval
instead, or use a loop to set the timeouts.
Have you tried jquery's animate? Would probably simplify things a lot -- they'll deal with all the timers and stuff for you. It's baked into the library you're already using so why not take advantage of it?
$('.image').mouseover(function(){
$(this).stop().animate(
{backgroundPosition:"(0 -360px)"},
{duration:1800})
})
.mouseout(function(){
$(this).stop().animate(
{backgroundPosition:"(0 0)"},
{duration:100})
});
By default it's going to use a liniar animation, but you could set up different easing if you wanted something different.
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