Tlite is a small utility for displaying tooltips. (Check out the demo.)
- Around 800 bytes minified and gzipped
- 0 dependencies
- Uses event delegation, so it is fast and works with dynamic sites
- IE9+, FF, Safari, Chrome
There's also a pretty sweet CSS-only library which may do the trick, depending on your needs.
Include tlite.css
or write your own. Include tlite.js
. Then write some
markup like this...
<button class="foo" title="Hi">Hover Here</button>
And invoke the tlite function to bind tlite to your page:
// Using es6 syntax, and classList. tlite should work
// in IE9+, but this sample won't!
tlite(el => el.classList.contains('foo'));
That will make any elements with a foo
class show a tooltip when hovered.
The tooltip can be positioned above, below, left, right, etc as follows:
<button class="foo" data-tlite="s" title="Hi">Hover Here</button>
The data-tlite
attribute specifies the position, but it can also be specified in JavaScript:
// grav defaults to 'n' (below the target element)
tlite(el => { grav: 's' });
The grav
property specifies the position of the tooltip possible values are:
s
- The tooltip shows above the targetn
- The tooltip shows below the targete
- The tooltip shows left of the targetw
- The tooltip shows right of the targetsw
- The tooltip shows to top right of the targetse
- The tooltip shows to top left of the targetnw
- The tooltip shows to bottom right of the targetne
- The tooltip shows to bottom left of the target
You can also manually trigger a show/hide of a tooltip:
// Show a tooltip beneath the target element
tlite.show(targetElement);
// Show a tooltip to the right of the target element
tlite.show(targetElement, { grav: 'w' });
// Hide it...
tlite.hide(targetElement);
When the tooltip is displayed, it is inserted as a child of the element it is associated with. What this means is that tooltips cannot be displayed on contentless tags such as img, input, textarea, etc. The workaround is to put the toolltip on a wrapper element. This was done so that if an element is dynamically removed from the DOM, its tooltip goes with it.
If putting a tooltip inside of a table, you may want to put tlite-table
class on the table to ensure proper positioning.
Tlite was really designed primarily for hover-based tooltips. If you display tlite tooltips on events other than hover (e.g. on focus or something), it is up to you to handle resize events (either repositioning the tooltip or hiding it), otherwise the tooltip could end up in an unexpected place.
Tlite does not escape your tooltip text. So, if you want to shove raw HTML in there, you can. But if you want to shove user-input in there, it is your job to ensure it is properly escaped!
If you don't want to use the title
attribute, you can use a data-tlite
attribute, instead.
<button data-tlite="My Tooltip">Hover Over Me</button>
Download and include tlite.min.js
Or install using NPM:
npm install tlite
Copyright (c) 2015 Chris Davies
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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