Only detect click event on pseudo-element

JavascriptJqueryCss

Javascript Problem Overview


Please see this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/ZWw3Z/5/

My code is:

p {
    position: relative;
    background-color: blue;
}

p:before {
    content: '';
    position: absolute;
    left:100%;
    width: 10px;
    height: 100%;
    background-color: red;
}

    <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean commodo ligula eget dolor. Aenean massa. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Donec quam felis, ultricies nec, pellentesque eu, pretium quis, sem. Nulla consequat massa quis enim. Donec pede justo, fringilla vel, aliquet nec, vulputate...</p>

I would like to trigger a click event only on the pseudo-element (the red bit). That is, I don't want the click event to be triggered on the blue bit.

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

This is not possible; pseudo-elements are not part of the DOM at all so you can't bind any events directly to them, you can only bind to their parent elements.

If you must have a click handler on the red region only, you have to make a child element, like a span, place it right after the opening <p> tag, apply styles to p span instead of p:before, and bind to it.

Solution 2 - Javascript

Actually, it is possible. You can check if the clicked position was outside of the element, since this will only happen if ::before or ::after was clicked.

This example only checks the element to the right but that should work in your case.

span = document.querySelector('span');

span.addEventListener('click', function (e) {
    if (e.offsetX > span.offsetWidth) {
        span.className = 'c2';
    } else {
        span.className = 'c1';
    }
});

div { margin: 20px; }
span:after { content: 'AFTER'; position: absolute; }

span.c1 { background: yellow; }
span.c2:after { background: yellow; }

<div><span>ELEMENT</span></div>

JSFiddle

Solution 3 - Javascript

On modern browsers you can try with the pointer-events css property (but it leads to the impossibility to detect mouse events on the parent node):

p {
    position: relative;
    background-color: blue;
    color:#ffffff;
    padding:0px 10px;
    pointer-events:none;
}
p::before {
    content: attr(data-before);
    margin-left:-10px;
    margin-right:10px;
    position: relative;
    background-color: red;
    padding:0px 10px;
    pointer-events:auto;
}

When the event target is your "p" element, you know it is your "p:before".

If you still need to detect mouse events on the main p, you may consider the possibility to modify your HTML structure. You can add a span tag and the following style:

p span {
    background:#393;
    padding:0px 10px;
    pointer-events:auto;
}

The event targets are now both the "span" and the "p:before" elements.

Example without jquery: http://jsfiddle.net/2nsptvcu/

Example with jquery: http://jsfiddle.net/0vygmnnb/

Here is the list of browsers supporting pointer-events: http://caniuse.com/#feat=pointer-events

Solution 4 - Javascript

Short Answer:

I did it. I wrote a function for dynamic usage for all the little people out there...

Working example which displays on the page

Working example logging to the console

Long Answer:

...Still did it.

It took me awhile to do it, since a psuedo element is not really on the page. While some of the answers above work in SOME scenarios, they ALL fail to be both dynamic and work in a scenario in which an element is both unexpected in size and position(such as absolute positioned elements overlaying a portion of the parent element). Mine does not.

Usage:

//some element selector and a click event...plain js works here too
$("div").click(function() {
    //returns an object {before: true/false, after: true/false}
	psuedoClick(this);

    //returns true/false
	psuedoClick(this).before;

    //returns true/false
	psuedoClick(this).after;

});

How it works:

It grabs the height, width, top, and left positions(based on the position away from the edge of the window) of the parent element and grabs the height, width, top, and left positions(based on the edge of the parent container) and compares those values to determine where the psuedo element is on the screen.

It then compares where the mouse is. As long as the mouse is in the newly created variable range then it returns true.

Note:

It is wise to make the parent element RELATIVE positioned. If you have an absolute positioned psuedo element, this function will only work if it is positioned based on the parent's dimensions(so the parent has to be relative...maybe sticky or fixed would work too....I dont know).

Code:

function psuedoClick(parentElem) {
	
	var beforeClicked,
      afterClicked;
  
  var parentLeft = parseInt(parentElem.getBoundingClientRect().left, 10),
      parentTop = parseInt(parentElem.getBoundingClientRect().top, 10);

  var parentWidth = parseInt(window.getComputedStyle(parentElem).width, 10),
      parentHeight = parseInt(window.getComputedStyle(parentElem).height, 10);

  var before = window.getComputedStyle(parentElem, ':before');
  
  var beforeStart = parentLeft + (parseInt(before.getPropertyValue("left"), 10)),
      beforeEnd = beforeStart + parseInt(before.width, 10);

  var beforeYStart = parentTop + (parseInt(before.getPropertyValue("top"), 10)),
      beforeYEnd = beforeYStart + parseInt(before.height, 10);

  var after = window.getComputedStyle(parentElem, ':after');
  
  var afterStart = parentLeft + (parseInt(after.getPropertyValue("left"), 10)),
      afterEnd = afterStart + parseInt(after.width, 10);

  var afterYStart = parentTop + (parseInt(after.getPropertyValue("top"), 10)),
      afterYEnd = afterYStart + parseInt(after.height, 10);

  var mouseX = event.clientX,
      mouseY = event.clientY;

  beforeClicked = (mouseX >= beforeStart && mouseX <= beforeEnd && mouseY >= beforeYStart && mouseY <= beforeYEnd ? true : false);

  afterClicked = (mouseX >= afterStart && mouseX <= afterEnd && mouseY >= afterYStart && mouseY <= afterYEnd ? true : false);
  
  return {
  	"before" : beforeClicked,
    "after"  : afterClicked
    
  };      

}

Support:

I dont know....it looks like ie is dumb and likes to return auto as a computed value sometimes. IT SEEMS TO WORK WELL IN ALL BROWSERS IF DIMENSIONS ARE SET IN CSS. So...set your height and width on your psuedo elements and only move them with top and left. I recommend using it on things that you are okay with it not working on. Like an animation or something. Chrome works...as usual.

Solution 5 - Javascript

My answer will work for anyone wanting to click a definitive area of the page. This worked for me on my absolutely-positioned :after

Thanks to this article, I realized (with jQuery) I can use e.pageY and e.pageX instead of worrying about e.offsetY/X and e.clientY/X issue between browsers.

> Through my trial and error, I started to use the clientX and clientY mouse coordinates in the jQuery event object. These coordinates gave me the X and Y offset of the mouse relative to the top-left corner of the browser's view port. As I was reading the jQuery 1.4 Reference Guide by Karl Swedberg and Jonathan Chaffer, however, I saw that they often referred to the pageX and pageY coordinates. After checking the updated jQuery documentation, I saw that these were the coordinates standardized by jQuery; and, I saw that they gave me the X and Y offset of the mouse relative to the entire document (not just the view port).

I liked this event.pageY idea because it would always be the same, as it was relative to the document. I can compare it to my :after's parent element using offset(), which returns its X and Y also relative to the document.

Therefore, I can come up with a range of "clickable" region on the entire page that never changes.


Here's my demo on codepen.


or if too lazy for codepen, here's the JS:

* I only cared about the Y values for my example.

var box = $('.box');
// clickable range - never changes
var max = box.offset().top + box.outerHeight();
var min = max - 30; // 30 is the height of the :after

var checkRange = function(y) {
  return (y >= min && y <= max);
}

box.click(function(e){
  if ( checkRange(e.pageY) ) {
    // do click action
    box.toggleClass('toggle');
  }
});

Solution 6 - Javascript

This works for me:

$('#element').click(function (e) {
        if (e.offsetX > e.target.offsetLeft) {
            // click on element
        }
         else{
           // click on ::before element
       }
});

Solution 7 - Javascript

Add condition in Click event to restrict the clickable area .

    $('#thing').click(function(e) {
       if (e.clientX > $(this).offset().left + 90 &&
             e.clientY < $(this).offset().top + 10) {
                 // action when clicking on after-element
                 // your code here
       }
     });

DEMO

Solution 8 - Javascript

This is edited answer by Fasoeu with latest CSS3 and JS ES6

Edited demo without using JQuery.

Shortest example of code:

<p><span>Some text</span></p>
p {
	position: relative;
	pointer-events: none;
}
p::before {
	content: "";
	position: absolute;
	pointer-events: auto;
}
p span {
	display: contents;
	pointer-events: auto;
}
const all_p = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('p'));

for (let p of all_p) {
	p.addEventListener("click", listener, false);
};
Explanation:

pointer-events control detection of events, removing receiving events from target, but keep receiving from pseudo-elements make possible to click on ::before and ::after and you will always know what you are clicking on pseudo-element, however if you still need to click, you put all content in nested element (span in example), but because we don't want to apply any additional styles, display: contents; become very handy solution and it supported by most browsers. pointer-events: none; as already mentioned in original post also widely supported.

The JavaScript part also used widely supported Array.from and for...of, however they are not necessary to use in code.

Solution 9 - Javascript

None of these answers are reliable, and mine wont be much more reliable.

Caveats aside, if you do get into the lucky scenario where the element you're trying to have clicked doesn't have padding (such that all of the "inner" space of the element is completely covered by sub-elements), then you can check the target of the click event against the container itself. If it matches, that means you've clicked a :before or :after element.

Obviously this would not be feasible with both types (before and after) however I have implemented it as a hack/speed fix and it is working very well, without a bunch of position checking, which may be inaccurate depending on about a million different factors.

Solution 10 - Javascript

I solved this case with add pointer-events: none; at :after css

Solution 11 - Javascript

No,but you can do like this

In html file add this section

<div class="arrow">
</div>

In css you can do like this

p div.arrow {
    content: '';
    position: absolute;
    left:100%;
    width: 10px;
    height: 100%;
    background-color: red;
} 

Hope it will help you

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