/jQuery-menu-aim

jQuery plugin to fire events when user's cursor aims at particular dropdown menu items. For making responsive mega dropdowns like Amazon's.

Primary LanguageJavaScript

jQuery-menu-aim

menu-aim is a jQuery plugin for dropdown menus that can differentiate between a user trying hover over a dropdown item vs trying to navigate into a submenu's contents.

menu-aim assumes that you are using a menu with submenus that expand to the menu's right. It will fire events when the user's mouse enters a new dropdown item and when that item is being intentionally hovered over.

Amazon screenshot

This problem is normally solved using timeouts and delays. menu-aim tries to solve this by detecting the direction of the user's mouse movement. This can make for quicker transitions when navigating up and down the menu. The experience is hopefully similar to amazon.com/'s "Shop by Department" dropdown.

Use like so:

 $("#menu").menuAim({
     activate: $.noop,  // fired on row activation
     deactivate: $.noop,  // fired on row deactivation
 });

...to receive events when a menu's row has been purposefully (de)activated.

The following options can be passed to menuAim. All functions execute with the relevant row's HTML element as the execution context ('this'):

 .menuAim({
     // Function to call when a row is purposefully activated. Use this
     // to show a submenu's content for the activated row.
     activate: function() {},

     // Function to call when a row is deactivated.
     deactivate: function() {},

     // Function to call when mouse enters a menu row. Entering a row
     // does not mean the row has been activated, as the user may be
     // mousing over to a submenu.
     enter: function() {},

     // Function to call when mouse exits a menu row.
     exit: function() {},

     // Selector for identifying which elements in the menu are rows
     // that can trigger the above events. Defaults to "> li".
     rowSelector: "> li",

     // You may have some menu rows that aren't submenus and therefore
     // shouldn't ever need to "activate." If so, filter submenu rows w/
     // this selector. Defaults to "*" (all elements).
     submenuSelector: "*"
 });

Want an example to learn from?

Check out example/example.html -- it has a working dropdown for you to play with:

Example screenshot
Play with the above example full of fun monkey pictures by opening example/example.html after downloading the repo.

FAQ

  1. What's the license? MIT.
  2. I'm not nearly bored enough. Got anything else? Read about this plugin's creation.