I am using CSS3 hover and transitions to show and hide an image. On mobile devices I would like to use the same transition for touch events.
Basically, the first touch would perform the hover effect or rollover, and the touch up would perform the roll off.
I would like to stay away from using JavaScript to do this. If there is a way to do it with pure CSS3 that would be the best option.
Use the :active
pseudo-class in your css, then add ontouchstart=""
and onmouseover=""
to the body tag.
The following code is excerpted from my site, in which I have buttons that get smaller and glow white when hovered(on pcs) or held down(on touch devices)
<style> .boxbutton:active{ -webkit-transform:scale(0.9); -moz-transform:scale(0.9); -ms-transform:scale(0.9); -o-transform:scale(0.9); transform:scale(0.9); -webkit-box-shadow:0px 0px 20px #FFF; -moz-box-shadow:0px 0px 20px #FFF; -o-box-shadow:0px 0px 20px #FFF; box-shadow:0px 0px 20px #FFF; } </style> <body ontouchstart=""> <a href="#teamdiv"> <div class="boxbutton" id="teambb"> <h5>Team</h5> </div> </a> </body>
The following edits are no longer relevant because I have deleted the original, incorrect instructions, but if you were here before these may still be helpful
EDIT: I have discovered it works more reliably if, rather than putting ontouchstart=""
in each link, put it in the <body>
tag. So your body tag should look like this<body ontouchstart="">
and your links look like this
<a href="#teamdiv"> <div class="boxbutton" id="teambb"> <h5>Team</h5> </div></a>
EDIT 2: I have figured out that, rather than copying your CSS and use screen size queries for desktop, just add `onmouseover="" to the body tag also, so the :active pseudo class will be called by the mouse on the desktop AND by touches on mobile. You can just ignore the rambling about media queries if you do this.
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