How do you Hover in ReactJS? - onMouseLeave not registered during fast hover over

会有一股神秘感。 提交于 2019-11-28 04:48:39
Elon Zito

Have you tried any of these?

onMouseDown onMouseEnter onMouseLeave onMouseMove onMouseOut onMouseOver onMouseUp

SyntheticEvent

it also mentions the following:

React normalizes events so that they have consistent properties across different browsers.

The event handlers below are triggered by an event in the bubbling phase. To register an event handler for the capture phase, append Capture to the event name; for example, instead of using onClick, you would use onClickCapture to handle the click event in the capture phase.

The previous answers are pretty confusing. You don't need a react-state to solve this, nor any special external lib. It can be achieved with pure css/sass:

The style:

.hover {
  position: relative;

  &:hover &__no-hover {
    opacity: 0;
  }

  &:hover &__hover {
    opacity: 1;
  }

  &__hover {
    position: absolute;
    top: 0;
    opacity: 0;
  }

  &__no-hover {
    opacity: 1;
  }
}

The React-Component

A simple Hover Pure-Rendering-Function:

const Hover = ({ onHover, children }) => (
    <div className="hover">
        <div className="hover__no-hover">{children}</div>
        <div className="hover__hover">{onHover}</div>
    </div>
)

Usage

Then use it like this:

    <Hover onHover={<div> Show this on hover </div>}>
        <div> Show on no hover </div>
    </Hover>

If you can produce a small demo showing the onMouseEnter / onMouseLeave or onMouseDown / onMouseUp bug, it would be worthwhile to post it to ReactJS's issues page or mailing list, just to raise the question and hear what the developers have to say about it.

In your use case, you seem to imply that CSS :hover and :active states would be enough for your purposes, so I suggest you use them. CSS is orders of magnitude faster and more reliable than Javascript, because it's directly implemented in the browser.

However, :hover and :active states cannot be specified in inline styles. What you can do is assign an ID or a class name to your elements and write your styles either in a stylesheet, if they are somewhat constant in your application, or in a dynamically generated <style> tag.

Here's an example of the latter technique: https://jsfiddle.net/ors1vos9/

you can use onMouseOver={this.onToggleOpen} and onMouseOut={this.onToggleOpen} to muse over and out on component

I've just bumped into this same problem when listening for onMouseLeave events on a disabled button. I worked around it by listening for the native mouseleave event on an element that wraps the disabled button.

componentDidMount() {
    this.watchForNativeMouseLeave();
},
componentDidUpdate() {
    this.watchForNativeMouseLeave();
},
// onMouseLeave doesn't work well on disabled elements
// https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/4251
watchForNativeMouseLeave() {
    this.refs.hoverElement.addEventListener('mouseleave', () => {
        if (this.props.disabled) {
            this.handleMouseOut();
        }
    });
},
render() {
    return (
        <span ref='hoverElement'
            onMouseEnter={this.handleMouseEnter}
            onMouseLeave={this.handleMouseLeave}
        >
            <button disabled={this.props.disabled}>Submit</button>
        </span>
    );
}

Here's a fiddle https://jsfiddle.net/qfLzkz5x/8/

A package called styled-components can solve this problem in an ELEGANT way.

Reference

  1. Glen Maddern - Styling React Apps with Styled Components

Example

const styled = styled.default
const Square = styled.div`
  height: 120px;
  width: 200px;
  margin: 100px;
  background-color: green;
  cursor: pointer;
  position: relative;
  &:hover {
    background-color: red;
  };
`
class Application extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <Square>
      </Square>
    )
  }
}

/*
 * Render the above component into the div#app
 */
ReactDOM.render(<Application />, document.getElementById('app'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.6.1/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.6.1/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/styled-components/dist/styled-components.min.js"></script>
<div id='app'></div>

Note: This answer was for a previous version of this question where the question asker was trying to use JavaScript to apply css styles… which can simply be done with CSS.

A simple css-only solution.

For applying basic styles, CSS is simpler and more performant that JS solutions 99% of the time. (Though more modern CSS-in-JS solutions — eg. React Components, etc — are arguably more maintainable.)

Run this code snippet to see it in action…

.hover-button .hover-button--on,
.hover-button:hover .hover-button--off {
  display: none;
}

.hover-button:hover .hover-button--on {
  display: inline;
}
<button class='hover-button'>
  <span class='hover-button--off'>Default</span>
  <span class='hover-button--on'>Hover!</span>
</button>

You can't with inline styling alone. Do not recommend reimplementing CSS features in JavaScript we already have a language that is extremely powerful and incredibly fast built for this use case -- CSS. So use it! Made Style It to assist.

npm install style-it --save

Functional Syntax (JSFIDDLE)

import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';

class Intro extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return Style.it(`
      .intro:hover {
        color: red;
      }

    `,
      <p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
    );
  }
}

export default Intro;

JSX Syntax (JSFIDDLE)

import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';

class Intro extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <Style>
      {`
        .intro:hover {
          color: red;
        }
      `}

      <p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
    </Style>
  }
}

export default Intro;

Use Radium!

The following is an example from their website:

var Radium = require('radium');
var React = require('react');
var color = require('color');

@Radium
class Button extends React.Component {
  static propTypes = {
    kind: React.PropTypes.oneOf(['primary', 'warning']).isRequired
  };

  render() {
    // Radium extends the style attribute to accept an array. It will merge
    // the styles in order. We use this feature here to apply the primary
    // or warning styles depending on the value of the `kind` prop. Since its
    // all just JavaScript, you can use whatever logic you want to decide which
    // styles are applied (props, state, context, etc).
    return (
      <button
        style={[
          styles.base,
          styles[this.props.kind]
        ]}>
        {this.props.children}
      </button>
    );
  }
}

// You can create your style objects dynamically or share them for
// every instance of the component.
var styles = {
  base: {
    color: '#fff',

    // Adding interactive state couldn't be easier! Add a special key to your
    // style object (:hover, :focus, :active, or @media) with the additional rules.
    ':hover': {
      background: color('#0074d9').lighten(0.2).hexString()
    }
  },

  primary: {
    background: '#0074D9'
  },

  warning: {
    background: '#FF4136'
  }
};

I had a similar issue when onMouseEnter was called but sometimes the corresponding onMouseLeave event wasn't fired, here is a workaround that works well for me (it partially relies on jQuery):

var Hover = React.createClass({
    getInitialState: function() {
        return {
            hover: false
        };
    },
    onMouseEnterHandler: function(e) {
        this.setState({
            hover: true
        });
        console.log('enter');

        $(e.currentTarget).one("mouseleave", function (e) {
            this.onMouseLeaveHandler();
        }.bind(this));

    },
    onMouseLeaveHandler: function() {
        this.setState({
            hover: false
        });
        console.log('leave');
    },
    render: function() {
        var inner = normal;
        if(this.state.hover) {
            inner = hover;
        }

        return (
            <div style={outer}>
                <div style={inner}
                    onMouseEnter={this.onMouseEnterHandler} >
                    {this.props.children}
                </div>
            </div>
        );
    }
});

See on jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/qtbr5cg6/1/


Why was it happening (in my case): I am running a jQuery scrolling animation (through $('#item').animate({ scrollTop: 0 })) when clicking on the item. So the cursor doesn't leave the item "naturally", but during a the JavaScript-driven animation ... and in this case the onMouseLeave was not fired properly by React (React 15.3.0, Chrome 51, Desktop)

I know It's been a while since this question was asked but I just run into the same issue of inconsistency with onMouseLeave() What I did is to use onMouseOut() for the drop-list and on mouse leave for the whole menu, it is reliable and works every time I've tested it. I saw the events here in the docs: https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/events.html#mouse-events here is an example using https://www.w3schools.com/bootstrap/bootstrap_dropdowns.asp:

handleHoverOff(event){
  //do what ever, for example I use it to collapse the dropdown
  let collapsing = true;
  this.setState({dropDownCollapsed : collapsing });
}

render{
  return(
    <div class="dropdown" onMouseLeave={this.handleHoverOff.bind(this)}>
      <button class="btn btn-primary dropdown-toggle" type="button" data-toggle="dropdown">Dropdown Example
      <span class="caret"></span></button>
      <ul class="dropdown-menu" onMouseOut={this.handleHoverOff.bind(this)}>
        <li><a href="#">bla bla 1</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">bla bla 2</a></li>
        <li><a href="#">bla bla 3</a></li>
      </ul>
    </div>
  )
}

I personally use Style It for inline-style in React or keep my style separately in a CSS or SASS file...

But if you are really interested doing it inline, look at the library, I share some of the usages below:

In the component:

import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';

class Intro extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <Style>
        {`
          .intro {
            font-size: 40px;
          }
        `}

        <p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
      </Style>
    );
  }
}

export default Intro;

Output:

    <p class="intro _scoped-1">
      <style type="text/css">
        ._scoped-1.intro {
          font-size: 40px;
        }
      </style>

      CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.
    </p>


Also you can use JavaScript variables with hover in your CSS as below :

import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';

class Intro extends React.Component {
  render() {
    const fontSize = 13;

    return Style.it(`
      .intro {
        font-size: ${ fontSize }px;  // ES2015 & ES6 Template Literal string interpolation
      }
      .package {
        color: blue;
      }
      .package:hover {
        color: aqua;
      }
    `,
      <p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
    );
  }
}

export default Intro;

And the result as below:

<p class="intro _scoped-1">
  <style type="text/css">
    ._scoped-1.intro {
      font-size: 13px;
    }
    ._scoped-1 .package {
      color: blue;
    }
    ._scoped-1 .package:hover {
      color: aqua;
    }
  </style>

  CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.
</p>

I could suggest you an example that was easy for me to understand, I use emotion in React JS to give styles. Here you could find more information of it https://emotion.sh/docs/introduction hope this help you.

const secondStyle = css`
  background: blue;
  height: 20px;
  width: 20px;
  :hover {
    cursor: pointer;
    background: red;
`

function myComponent() {
  return (
     <div className={firstStyle}>
       <button className={secondStyle}>Submit<button>
  )
}
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