Stuff you can do with CSS pointer events
Martijn Cuppens (the same fella with the very weird div!) has some more irresistible CSS trickery. Three of the examples are about making a child element trigger an event on a parent element (almost like the magic that is :focus-within
).
Here's how I reasoned it out to myself:
- You know how if you
display: hidden;
an element, even if youdisplay: block;
a child, it doesn't matter — it's hidden because its parent is hidden. - The same is not true for
visibility: hidden;
. Children will be hidden becausevisibility
inherits, but if youvisibility: visible;
them, they become visible again. - That's what is happening here with
pointer-events
. If youpointer-events: none;
on a parent and thenpointer-events: auto;
on a child, you're re-enabling pointer events. Then a:hover
on a parent will be triggered (for example), when hoving the child, but nowhere else inside the parent.
And don't miss pointer-events: visiblePainted;
😳
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