Awesome
Event From
Determine if a browser event was caused by mouse
, touch
, or key
input. Can be used to:
- Ignore
mouse
events caused bytouch
input. - Determine if
focus
was initiated from the keyboard (to know when to add focus styles). - Determine if a
click
event was frommouse
,touch
, orkey
input. - And anything else where knowing the type of user interaction that generated the event is helpful.
- If you're using React you may be interested in React Interactive, which uses Event From under the hood.
Live demo app for Event From
Code is in the /demo
folder.
npm install --save event-from
import { eventFrom } from 'event-from';
const handleEvent = (event) => {
// call eventFrom in the event handler and pass in the event
// eventFrom will return 1 of 3 strings: 'mouse' | 'touch' | 'key'
const inputType = eventFrom(event);
// ...your logic using inputType
};
Ignore mouse
events caused by touch
input
Note that a touch interaction will fire Touch Events as the interaction is in progress (touch on the screen), and will fire Mouse Events during a long press (extended touch on the screen), or after the touch interaction has finished (after the touch is removed from the screen) to support sites that only listen for Mouse Events.
import { eventFrom } from 'event-from';
const handleMouseEvent = (e) => {
// early return to ignore mouse events not from mouse input
if (eventFrom(e) !== 'mouse') return;
// code for handling mouse events from mouse input
};
element.addEventListener('mouseenter', handleMouseEvent, false);
Determine if a focus
event was from key
input to add focus styles
import { eventFrom } from 'event-from';
const handleFocusEvent = (e) => {
if (eventFrom(e) === 'key') {
// add focus styles when focus is from keyboard input
}
};
element.addEventListener('focus', handleFocusEvent, false);
Determine if a click
event was from mouse
, touch
, or key
input
import { eventFrom } from 'event-from';
const handleClickEvent = (e) => {
switch (eventFrom(e)) {
case 'mouse':
// click event from mouse
break;
case 'touch':
// click event from touch
break;
case 'key':
// click event from key
break;
}
};
element.addEventListener('click', handleClickEvent, false);
setEventFrom(value)
value: 'mouse' | 'touch' | 'key'
Temporarily set the return value for eventFrom(e)
. This is useful when manually generating events, for example calling el.focus()
or el.click()
, and you want eventFrom(e)
to treat that event as occurring from a specific input.
import { eventFrom, setEventFrom } from 'event-from';
const handleFocusEvent = (e) => {
if (eventFrom(e) === 'key') {
// add focus styles when focus is from keyboard input
}
};
const element = document.getElementById('focus-example');
element.addEventListener('focus', handleFocusEvent, false);
// somewhere in your code where you want to call focus on the element
// and have it be treated as an event from 'key' input,
// now the call to eventFrom(e) in handleFocusEvent will return 'key'
setEventFrom('key');
element.focus();
How it works
Event From sets passive capture phase event listeners on the document
and window
and tracks the recent event history to know what input type is responsible for the event that's passed to eventFrom(event)
.
The listeners that Event From sets are all low frequency event listeners (enter/leave/down/up/focus/etc). Event From does not set any high frequency listeners such as move
or scroll
listeners.