Listen for both clicks and click-like touches (not scrolls or drags).
This library is very small and simple and focused, without any dependencies. It is not a touch gesture library or a complete fastclick-style solution. Plenty of similar libraries exist, but none of them seemed exactly right for my simple needs. For more about the purpose of the library, read "Why?".
This library is heavily inspired by tap.js, which is no longer maintained.
(If the demo works on your phone, would you mind tweeting me your specs,
@davidtheclark
? That way I can list the devices where we know it works.
And of course let me know if you find any bugs!)
npm install teeny-tap
You will need to be compiling CommonJS modules (browserify or webpack).
IE9+ and everything help, I hope. Testing underway. (If you can help out by trying the demo on your mobile device, please do!)
var createTapListener = require('teeny-tap');
var docTapListener = createTapListener(document.documentElement, function(e) {
console.log('A tap happened!');
});
// ...
docTapListener.remove();
That's it. Very simple. You create and remove listeners.
Adds a tap listener on element
, using addEventListener()
.
When there's a tap, callback
is invoked with
the relevant event
as its argument (either a click
or touchend
event).
Returns an object with a remove
function, for removing the listener.
Remove the listener that you added when you created tapListenerInstance
.
For react-aria-menubutton, I need to close an open menu when the user taps/clicks outside of it.
The click event wasn't reliable: mobile Safari screws it up.
So I needed to distinguish, on touch devices, between touches
that are scrolling or dragging and touches that are clicking,
in situations where the regular click
event doesn't work.
Existing solutions that I found weren't satisfactory for a few reasons:
-
jQuery or other dependencies I didn't want or need.
-
Many just threw in a
touchstart
ortouchend
listener, in addition to the click; but that alone won't distinguish between tapping and scrolling/dragging, so it's insufficient. The menu might close when you, say, scroll down in order to see more of it. Egad! -
One solution to the detect-clicks-outside-an-element problem is to add an underlay that covers the page, beneath the element, and listen for clicks on that. However, this prevents the click from getting through and actually doing something; so if I click a link outside the open menu, that click only closes the menu, and I have to click again to go where I wanted to go. Non-optimal.
-
A number of solutions just use
click
events, which won't work on most browsers on most iPhones and iPads, due to mobile Safari's unique and unpleasant handling of click events. -
Some went the other way, and had more fine-tuning than I want or need.
tap.js pretty much provided exactly what I needed, but that library is no longer maintained so I made this one to carry the torch, to fill the need.
But know that I do not like that this exists, do not want it to need to exist. If you know of a way to accomplish the same goal without this library, please let me know!