Very clever! Thanks!
Walter
On Oct 3, 2008, at 12:27 PM, Hector Virgen wrote:
> In my experience I've had success using two different mouseover events
> instead of a mouseover/mouseout combination.
> The first mouseover observer is a simple one:
>
> $('nav').observe('mouseover', function(event)
In my experience I've had success using two different mouseover events
instead of a mouseover/mouseout combination.
The first mouseover observer is a simple one:
$('nav').observe('mouseover', function(event) {
$('nav').show();
});
The second observer observes the entire document and checks to
This is the same problem we are talking about in at least two other
threads. If you set a mouseout listener on a DIV, that event will
fire as soon as you mouse over one of that DIV's children. Because,
you know, technically you are no longer over the parent DIV, you are
over the child.
IE
Ok, it works now thanks =)
now i need to get some bugs out of it,
someone here who knowns how to get it out?
if i go over the home button the menu shows, but when im going into my
menu to click on a link my menu closes :S
On 2 okt, 15:07, puckpuck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> $('menu_home').
$('menu_home').observe('mouseover', dropdown('submenu_home'));
$('menu_home').observe('mouseout', dropdown('submenu_home'));
These 2 lines are your offensive lines of code. Try this instead:
$('menu_home').observe('mouseover',
dropdown.curry('submenu_home'));
$('menu_home').obse