focusin and focusout events are proprietary Microsoft events, it is
unlikely that anybody will use them in a modern Web page.
Our bubbling focus and blur are already relying on them.

On Sep 21, 1:57 am, Már <mar.orlygs...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It's late at night here, so this might be an embarrassingly stupid
> question...
>
> What happens if one were to bind a `focusin` handler that runs
> event.stopPropagation(), wouldn't that also unexpectedly ruin the
> bubbling of 'submit', 'change' and 'select' events originating from
> within that element?
>
> If so, then this approach seems quite fragile, and the documentation
> for that behavior should warn users to be extra super careful when
> using focusin/focusout handlers.
>
> (I suppose non-native `mouseenter` and `mouseleave` events, are
> equally vulnerable to use of event.stopPropagation() within `mousein`/
> `mouseout` events, but in such cases the bleed-over would be less
> surprising, than bleed-over between seemingly unrelated events like
> `submit`, `change` and `focusin`.)
>
> --
> Már
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