CSS+Javascript power. Fancy menu
Update: the code that empowers this menu has been upgraded to the latest MooTools version, and even improved! Now works with vertical, horizontal menus, with more flexible morphing!
Let me introduce you to Fancy Menu:
When it comes to creating the navigation part of your Website, the first thing you might think of is an unordered list that you style as tabs. Lately, such navbars are everywhere, as many people believe they’ll make their site more Web 2.0-compatible. Personally, I just think they’re semantically better and accessible.
In this article I’ll go through the creation of a custom navigation bar with some cute Javascript effects that will certainly impress your friends. Thanks to the great Mootools library, this beauty is contained in 1.5kb. Not only that, but it’s also cross browser (tested on Internet Explorer 6/7, Firefox and Safari) and accessible!
Introduction
Every time that I know I’m going to use Javascript to alter the behavior or look of something, I try to come up with a simple markup, and make sure it renders perfectly with Javascript turned off. To illustrate this point, imagine that you want to make an element wider on rollover. The property Javascript would change is width:, so I make sure first that my style works when I modify the width randomly.
For this menu, as we’ll be having a movable element that acts as the background, we should first make sure that just by using css, we can freely move it and that it won’t affect the display of the menu. If you didn’t do this, when you’re coding the JS and face a bug, you’ll find yourself wondering if it is caused by the CSS, the Javascript, the browser?
Mark it up
Just like any other navigation, we’re going to use an unordered list with some anchors:
<div id="fancymenu"><ul><li class="current" id="menu_home"><a href="#">Home</a></li><li id="menu_plantatree"><a href="#">Plant a tree</a></li><li id="menu_travel"><a href="#">Travel</a></li><li id="menu_rideanelephant"><a href="#">Ride an elephant</a></li></ul></div>
This is the foundation of a semantically correct, degradable navigation structure.
The CSS styling
As I said before, it’s paramount that we create flawless, cross browser CSS code. Let’s get to it
The first problem we face is that it’s impossible to use the background property for the rounded box that follows your mouse, with the current CSS specs shared by most browsers. That forces us to add a new LI item that will act as the moving background.
We’re going to set position: relative to the unordered list, and position: absolute to the moving item, so that it’s easy to move it between the menu boundaries from Javascript. If you don’t quite understand how this works, I encourage you to quickly read this article about CSS positioning. You’ll understand that if we simply set position: absolute to it, we’d have to do some hard, useless calculations Javascript side to positionate it correctly.
Then, this is the code we have so far:
#fancymenu {position: relative;height: 29px;width: 421px;background: url('images/bg.gif') no-repeat top;padding: 15px;margin: 10px 0;overflow: hidden;}#fancymenu ul {padding: 0;margin: 0;}/* Don't apply padding here (offsetWidth will differ in IE)If you need padding add it to the child anchor */#fancymenu ul li {float: left;list-style: none;}#fancymenu ul li a {text-indent: -500em;z-index: 10;display: block;float: left;height: 30px;position: relative;overflow: hidden;}
So far it’s quite easy, and I included some comments for the tricky parts. The text-indent property is used to hide the text without adding extra markup, and keeping it accesible.
Now, we have to add the background images for each link:#menu_home a {width: 59px;background: url('images/menu_home.png') no-repeat center !important;background: url('images/menu_home.gif') no-repeat center; // ie!}#menu_plantatree a {width: 119px;background: url('images/menu_plantatree.png') no-repeat center !important;background: url('images/menu_plantatree.gif') no-repeat center;}#menu_travel a {width: 70px;background: url('images/menu_travel.png') no-repeat center !important;background: url('images/menu_travel.gif') no-repeat center;}#menu_rideanelephant a {width: 142px;background: url('images/menu_rideanelephant.png') no-repeat center !important;background: url('images/menu_rideanelephant.gif') no-repeat center;}
In the following section you’ll see why we use .gif images for Internet Explorer by using the !important hack.
The moving background
As we discussed, there’s a LI that moves in a lower layer and stretches to take the shape of each element. Because of its structure, we’re going to implement something similar to the Sliding Doors technique, but without text.
Its markup would be the following:
<li class="background"><div class="left"> </div></li>
As it doesn’t have any semantic role in the unordered list, we’re going to include it from Javascript. Of course, for testing, you can include it first manually and then remove it. This is the style for it:
#fancymenu li.background {background: url('images/bg_menu_right.png') no-repeat top right !important;background: url('images/bg_menu_right.gif') no-repeat top right;z-index: 8;position: absolute;visibility: hidden;}#fancymenu .background .left {background: url('images/bg_menu.png') no-repeat top left !important;background: url('images/bg_menu.gif') no-repeat top left;height: 30px;margin-right: 9px; /* 7px is the width of the rounded shape */}
The use of this technique is one of the main reasons why we don’t use filters to display the PNGs in Internet Explorer. You can’t decide the position of the background with them, which would make the right corner side display above the left part. Read this article about the png hack limitations to find out more. Another reason is that Microsoft is updating users to IE7 automatically, which supports png perfectly.
Keep in mind, as well, that when you export the .gifs you’ll have to set the Matte to match the background color, otherwise everything will look really bad. This picture illustrates what your images should look like:
Scripting it
Thanks to our smart CSS code, our Javascript is very short and simple. Its job is limited to adding the extra background markup, and of course the effects for shrinking and moving it.
We’re just going to need Mootools’ Fx.Style.js, Dom.js, and of course their dependencies. For this article’s example, I also used a custom transition found in the Fx.Transitions package (remember that transitions are what make the movement of the background vary). It’s coded in the form of a Class, so that it’s possible to initialize several menus on the same page.
Click here to see Javascript code
var SlideList = new Class({initialize: function(menu, options) {this.setOptions(this.getOptions(), options);this.menu = $(menu), this.current = this.menu.getElement('li.current');this.menu.getElements('li').each(function(item){item.addEvent('mouseover', function(){ this.moveBg(item); }.bind(this));item.addEvent('mouseout', function(){ this.moveBg(this.current); }.bind(this));item.addEvent('click', function(event){ this.clickItem(event, item); }.bind(this));}.bind(this));this.back = new Element('li').addClass('background').adopt(new Element('div').addClass('left')).injectInside(this.menu);this.back.fx = this.back.effects(this.options);if(this.current) this.setCurrent(this.current);},setCurrent: function(el, effect){this.back.setStyles({left: (el.offsetLeft)+'px', width: (el.offsetWidth)+'px'});(effect) ? this.back.effect('opacity').set(0).start(1) : this.back.setOpacity(1);this.current = el;},getOptions: function(){return {transition: Fx.Transitions.sineInOut,duration: 500, wait: false,onClick: Class.empty};},clickItem: function(event, item) {if(!this.current) this.setCurrent(item, true);this.current = item;this.options.onClick(new Event(event), item);},moveBg: function(to) {if(!this.current) return;this.back.fx.custom({left: [this.back.offsetLeft, to.offsetLeft],width: [this.back.offsetWidth, to.offsetWidth]});}});SlideList.implement(new Options);
Finally, it’s time to start it. Just create the object, by passing the id and desired options. The following example shows how to do it when the page DOM tree is loaded.
Click here to see Javascript code
window.addEvent('domready', function() {new SlideList($E('ul', 'fancymenu'), {transition: Fx.Transitions.backOut, duration: 700, onClick: function(ev, item) { ev.stop(); }});});
The script first looks for the element that has the current class. If it finds it, it positions the background behind it. If it doesn’t, it waits till the user first click on some item to set the ‘current’ class. This comes in very handy for menus meant for user selection, like the example below, instead of menus with links to actual URLs.
There’s an onClick option, which calls a function with an Event object, and the clicked element object reference as parameters. You can also change the effect duration, transition, etc.
Extend it
If you’ve made it this far, you must’ve noticed that it hasn’t been dead easy. In fact, the tutorial is not aimed solely to teach you how to create a menu, but for you to understand the possibilities you have using CSS and Javascript to make something stand out, and at the same time provide some tips to get you started if you want to create your own.
Here’s another example, using the very same Javascript class!
Tags: on January 29th, 2007
September 5th, 2007 at 6:26 pm
[...] Devthought - Guillermo Rauch’s Blog » CSS+Javascript power. Fancy menu (tags: javascript css menu webdesign navigation mootools design) [...]
September 5th, 2007 at 5:23 pm
[...] e Css com efeito bem interessante. O blog Devthought, do argentino Guillermo Rauch, publicou este menu com Javascript e CSS. [...]
September 5th, 2007 at 4:05 pm
[...] O blog Devthought, do argentino Guillermo Rauch, publicou este menu com Javascript e CSS. [...]
September 5th, 2007 at 10:22 am
Very good, however I a lot of work is needed to make these compliant.
September 4th, 2007 at 6:15 pm
Thanks guy for this nice stuff
September 3rd, 2007 at 8:18 pm
Ah thank you for that, I’m still getting use to using FW and didn’t even realise what that was for. You’re a champ
September 3rd, 2007 at 8:08 pm
John,
When you export and select the transparency (alpha transparency), there’s a Matte option with a color picker. Select the color and it’ll add the partial border to your fonts.
September 3rd, 2007 at 7:56 pm
Not a complete border? What did you do to achieve the gif image border? I use Fireworks or Photoshop and I can give it a complete border but obviously that’s not right.
p.s. Sorry to be a pain in the butt.
September 3rd, 2007 at 7:54 pm
@John
That’s correct, except it’s not a complete border.
September 3rd, 2007 at 7:26 pm
@Guillermo Rauch
What I’m asking is this. For each link item (eg: HOME) you have created two images. One is gif the other is png (I understand why, just not how).
So because the font colour is white with a transparent background, for the png image you just save it as a white text colour with transparent background, but when saving it as a gif you’re saving it as a white text colour with orange stroke (border) and transparent background. Is that correct?
September 3rd, 2007 at 11:31 am
Very Excellent Work
September 3rd, 2007 at 11:03 am
@John
The edges of good-looking fonts are ‘antialiased’. This means some pixels are slightly transparent. .gif cannot achieve this, it can set a transparent pixel but can’t determine the level of transparency.
That’s why you have to hard-include the border (in my case, the orange one), with your favorite image editing tool, for .GIF, and leave .PNG as is.
September 3rd, 2007 at 11:01 am
@Julio
Yes, extremely soon
September 3rd, 2007 at 10:57 am
Please Guillermo…
I’m looking forward the vertical oriented menu… will you present us soon?
Great job!!
September 3rd, 2007 at 6:26 am
Great menu, however I’m confused about the step with the png/gif image. The example you give is not very clear and I’m not exactly sure how to go about doing it.