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YUI 2 has been deprecated since 2011. This site acts as an archive for files and documentation.
This documentation is no longer maintained.
Using Progressive Enhancement to skin checkboxes with the help of the YUILoader
and the Event Utility's focus
and blur
events and the
delegate
method.
There are a few challenges when trying to skin an HTML checkbox using CSS. To start, most of the
A-grade browsers don't provide
support for CSS properties like border
and background
on the
<input type="checkbox">
element. Additionally, IE 6 and IE 7 (Quirks Mode)
lack support for attribute selectors necessary to style the checked
and
disabled
states. Additionally, IE 6 and 7 only support the :focus
and
:active
pseudo classes on <a>
elements, both of which are needed
to style a checkbox when it is focused or depressed.
Despite the shortcomings in cross-browser CSS support, with a little extra markup and through the use of
JavaScript it is possible to skin an <input type="checkbox">
element
consistently well in all of the
A-grade browsers.
Since CSS support for the <input type="checkbox">
element is lacking, wrap
<input type="checkbox">
elements in one or more inline elements to provide the
necessary hooks for styling. In this example, each <input type="checkbox">
element is wrapped by two <span>
s.
To style each checkbox, a class name of yui-checkbox
will be applied to the
outtermost <span>
wrapping each <input type="checkbox">
element. An additional class will be used to represent the various states of each checkbox. The
class name for each state will follow a consistent pattern: yui-checkbox-[state]
.
For this example, the following state-based class names will be used:
yui-checkbox-focus
yui-checkbox-active
yui-checkbox-checked
The styles for each checkbox comes together as follows:
Application and removal of the state-based class names will be facilitated by JavaScript event
handlers. Each event handler will track the state of the
<input type="checkbox">
element, and apply and remove corresponding
state-based class names from its outtermost <span>
making it easy to style each state. And since each JavaScript is required for state management,
the stylesheet for the skinned checkboxes will only be added to the page when JavaScript is
enabled. This will ensure that each checkbox works correctly with and without JavaScript enabled.
Since there could easily be many instances of a skinned checkbox on the page, all event listeners will be attached to the containing element for all checkboxes. Each listener will listen for events as they bubble up from each checkbox. Relying on event bubbling will improve the overall performance of the page by reducing the number of event handlers.
Since the DOM focus
and blur
events do not bubble, use the Event Utility's
specialized focusin
and focusout
events as an alternative to
attaching discrete focus and blur event handlers to the <input type="checkbox">
element of each skinned checkbox. The specialized focusin
and
focusout
events make it possible to attach a single focus and blur event
listener on the containing element of each checkbox thereby increasing the performance
of the page. The complete script for the example comes together as follows:
The markup above will be transformed using both CSS and JavaScript. To account
for the scenario where the user has CSS enabled in their browser but JavaScript
is disabled, the CSS used to style the checkboxes will be loaded via JavaScript
using the
YUI Loader.
Additionally, a small block of JavaScript will be placed in the
<head>
used to temporarily hide the markup
while the JavaScript and CSS are in the process of loading to prevent the user
from seeing a flash unstyled content.
Note: You are viewing this example in debug mode with logging enabled. This can significantly slow performance.
All YUI 2.x users should review the YUI 2.8.2 security bulletin, which discusses a vulnerability present in YUI 2.4.0-2.8.1.
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