I have got a span with dynamic data in my page, with ellipsis
style.
.my-class
{
text-overflow: ellipsis;
overflow: hidden;
white-space: nowrap;
width: 71px;
}
<span id="myId" class="my-class"></span>
document.getElementById('myId').innerText = "...";
I'd like to add to this element tooltip with the same content, but I want it to appear only when the content is long and the ellipsis appear on screen.
Is there any way to do it?
Does the browser throw an event when ellipsis
is activated?
*Browser: Internet Explorer
text-overflow:ellipsis;
doesn't work at all in Firefox -- see this question for more: stackoverflow.com/questions/4927257/…
element.offsetWidth < element.scrollWidth
as per this answer seems to work so far.
text-overflow:ellipsis;
now works in Firefox; it was added in Firefox 7 (released September 2011).
Here's a way that does it using the built-in ellipsis setting, and adds the title
attribute on-demand (with jQuery) building on Martin Smith's comment:
$('.mightOverflow').bind('mouseenter', function(){
var $this = $(this);
if(this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$this.attr('title')){
$this.attr('title', $this.text());
}
});
Here's a pure CSS solution. No need for jQuery. It won't show a tooltip, instead it'll just expand the content to its full length on mouseover.
Works great if you have content that gets replaced. Then you don't have to run a jQuery function every time.
.might-overflow {
text-overflow: ellipsis;
overflow : hidden;
white-space: nowrap;
}
.might-overflow:hover {
text-overflow: clip;
white-space: normal;
word-break: break-all;
}
Here are two other pure CSS solutions:
Show the truncated text in place:
.overflow { overflow: hidden; -ms-text-overflow: ellipsis; text-overflow: ellipsis; white-space: nowrap; } .overflow:hover { overflow: visible; } .overflow:hover span { position: relative; background-color: white; box-shadow: 0 0 4px 0 black; border-radius: 1px; }
Show an arbitrary "tooltip":
.wrap { position: relative; } .overflow { white-space: nowrap; overflow: hidden; text-overflow: ellipsis; pointer-events:none; } .overflow:after { content:""; display: block; position: absolute; top: 0; right: 0; width: 20px; height: 15px; z-index: 1; border: 1px solid red; /* for visualization only */ pointer-events:initial; } .overflow:hover:after{ cursor: pointer; } .tooltip { /* visibility: hidden; */ display: none; position: absolute; top: 10; left: 0; background-color: #fff; padding: 10px; -webkit-box-shadow: 0 0 50px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.3); opacity: 0; transition: opacity 0.5s ease; } .overflow:hover + .tooltip { /*visibility: visible; */ display: initial; transition: opacity 0.5s ease; opacity: 1; }
uosɐſ's answer is fundamentally correct, but you probably don't want to do it in the mouseenter event. That's going to cause it to do the calculation to determine if it's needed, each time you mouse over the element. Unless the size of the element is changing, there's no reason to do that.
It would be better to just call this code immediately after the element is added to the DOM:
var $ele = $('#mightOverflow');
var ele = $ele.eq(0);
if (ele.offsetWidth < ele.scrollWidth)
$ele.attr('title', $ele.text());
Or, if you don't know when exactly it's added, then call that code after the page is finished loading.
if you have more than a single element that you need to do this with, then you can give them all the same class (such as "mightOverflow"), and use this code to update them all:
$('.mightOverflow').each(function() {
var $ele = $(this);
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth)
$ele.attr('title', $ele.text());
});
$(".mightOverflow").each(function() { if( $(this).offsetWidth < $(this).scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title')){ $(this).attr('title', $(this).text()); $(this).css('border-bottom', '1px dotted #A8A8A8'); } });
this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth
and possibly even the check for !$this.attr('title')
will be performed each time you mouse over the element.
Here is my jQuery plugin:
(function($) {
'use strict';
$.fn.tooltipOnOverflow = function() {
$(this).on("mouseenter", function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth) {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
} else {
$(this).removeAttr("title");
}
});
};
})(jQuery);
Usage:
$("td, th").tooltipOnOverflow();
Edit:
I have made a gist for this plugin. https://gist.github.com/UziTech/d45102cdffb1039d4415
We need to detect whether ellipsis is really applied, then to show a tooltip to reveal full text. It is not enough by only comparing "this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth
" when the element nearly holding its content but only lacking one or two more pixels in width, especially for the text of full-width Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters.
Here is an example: http://jsfiddle.net/28r5D/5/
I found a way to improve ellipsis detection:
Compare "this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth" first, continue step #2 if failed. Switch css style temporally to {'overflow': 'visible', 'white-space': 'normal', 'word-break': 'break-all'}. Let browser do relayout. If word-wrap happening, the element will expands its height which also means ellipsis is required. Restore css style.
Here is my improvement: http://jsfiddle.net/28r5D/6/
I created a jQuery plugin that uses Bootstrap's tooltip instead of the browser's build-in tooltip. Please note that this has not been tested with older browser.
JSFiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/0bhsoavy/4/
$.fn.tooltipOnOverflow = function(options) {
$(this).on("mouseenter", function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth) {
options = options || { placement: "auto"}
options.title = $(this).text();
$(this).tooltip(options);
$(this).tooltip("show");
} else {
if ($(this).data("bs.tooltip")) {
$tooltip.tooltip("hide");
$tooltip.removeData("bs.tooltip");
}
}
});
};
Here's a Vanilla JavaScript solution:
var cells = document.getElementsByClassName("cell"); for(const cell of cells) { cell.addEventListener('mouseenter', setTitleIfNecessary, false); } function setTitleIfNecessary() { if(this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth) { this.setAttribute('title', this.innerHTML); } } .cell { white-space: nowrap; overflow: hidden; text-overflow: ellipsis; border: 1px; border-style: solid; width: 120px; }
This was my solution, works as a charm!
$(document).on('mouseover', 'input, span', function() {
var needEllipsis = $(this).css('text-overflow') && (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth);
var hasNotTitleAttr = typeof $(this).attr('title') === 'undefined';
if (needEllipsis === true) {
if(hasNotTitleAttr === true){
$(this).attr('title', $(this).val());
}
}
if(needEllipsis === false && hasNotTitleAttr == false){
$(this).removeAttr('title');
}
});
If you want to do this solely using javascript, I would do the following. Give the span an id attribute (so that it can easily be retrieved from the DOM) and place all the content in an attribute named 'content':
<span id='myDataId' style='text-overflow: ellipsis; overflow : hidden;
white-space: nowrap; width: 71;' content='{$myData}'>${myData}</span>
Then, in your javascript, you can do the following after the element has been inserted into the DOM.
var elemInnerText, elemContent;
elemInnerText = document.getElementById("myDataId").innerText;
elemContent = document.getElementById("myDataId").getAttribute('content')
if(elemInnerText.length <= elemContent.length)
{
document.getElementById("myDataId").setAttribute('title', elemContent);
}
Of course, if you're using javascript to insert the span into the DOM, you could just keep the content in a variable before inserting it. This way you don't need a content attribute on the span.
There are more elegant solutions than this if you want to use jQuery.
$("#myDataId").attr("title", function() { var innerText = $(this).text(); var content = $(this).attr("content"); if (innerText.length <= content.length) { return content; } return null; });
This is what I did. Most tooltip scripts require you to execute a function that stores the tooltips. This is a jQuery example:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return $(this).css('text-overflow') == 'ellipsis';
}).each(function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title')) {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
}
})).done(function(){
setupTooltip();
});
If you didn't want to check for ellipsis css, you could simplify like:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title'));
}).each(function() {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
})).done(function(){
setupTooltip();
});
I have the "when" around it, so that the "setupTooltip" function doesn't execute until all titles have been updated. Replace the "setupTooltip", with your tooltip function and the * with the elements you want to check. * will go through them all if you leave it.
If you simply want to just update the title attributes with the browsers tooltip, you can simplify like:
$('*').filter(function() {
return $(this).css('text-overflow') == 'ellipsis';
}).each(function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title')) {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
}
});
Or without check for ellipsis:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title'));
}).each(function() {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
});
This is what I ended up doing based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/13259660/1714951 and adding the removal of the title attribute when the element doesn't overflow anymore. This is pure JS (ES6), uses event delegation for performance (when using several elements with the same class) and guard clauses for readability:
// You may want to change document by an element closer to your target
// so that the handler is not executed as much
document.addEventListener( 'mouseenter', event => {
let eventTarget = event.target;
// This could be easily applied to text-truncate instead of my-class if you use bootstrap
if ( !eventTarget.classList?.contains( 'my-class' ) ) {
return;
}
if ( eventTarget.offsetWidth < eventTarget.scrollWidth ) {
eventTarget.setAttribute( 'title', eventTarget.innerText );
return;
}
eventTarget.removeAttribute( 'title' );
}, true );
I have CSS class, which determines where to put ellipsis. Based on that, I do the following (element set could be different, i write those, where ellipsis is used, of course it could be a separate class selector):
$(document).on('mouseover', 'input, td, th', function() {
if ($(this).css('text-overflow') && typeof $(this).attr('title') === 'undefined') {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).val());
}
});
this
was an anchor
so I used this.text()
instead of val()
None of the solutions above worked for me, but I figured out a great solution. The biggest mistake people are making is having all the 3 CSS properties declared on the element upon pageload. You have to add those styles+tooltip dynamically IF and ONLY IF the span you want an ellipses on is wider than its parent.
$('table').each(function(){
var content = $(this).find('span').text();
var span = $(this).find('span');
var td = $(this).find('td');
var styles = {
'text-overflow':'ellipsis',
'white-space':'nowrap',
'overflow':'hidden',
'display':'block',
'width': 'auto'
};
if (span.width() > td.width()){
span.css(styles)
.tooltip({
trigger: 'hover',
html: true,
title: content,
placement: 'bottom'
});
}
});
You could possibly surround the span with another span, then simply test if the width of the original/inner span is greater than that of the new/outer span. Note that I say possibly -- it is roughly based on my situation where I had a span
inside of a td
so I don't actually know that if it will work with a span
inside of a span
.
Here though is my code for others who may find themselves in a position similar to mine; I'm copying/pasting it without modification even though it is in an Angular context, I don't think that detracts from the readability and the essential concept. I coded it as a service method because I needed to apply it in more than one place. The selector I've been passing in has been a class selector that will match multiple instances.
CaseService.applyTooltip = function(selector) {
angular.element(selector).on('mouseenter', function(){
var td = $(this)
var span = td.find('span');
if (!span.attr('tooltip-computed')) {
//compute just once
span.attr('tooltip-computed','1');
if (span.width() > td.width()){
span.attr('data-toggle','tooltip');
span.attr('data-placement','right');
span.attr('title', span.html());
}
}
});
}
Success story sharing
"As of jQuery 1.7, the .on() method is the preferred method for attaching event handlers to a document"
for more info see api.jquery.com/bind and api.jquery.com/on