I have been looking at jquery plugin and was wondering how to adapt that plugin to turn a number (like 4.8618164) into a 4.8618164 stars filled out of 5. Basically interpreting a number <5 into stars filled in a 5-star rating system using jQuery/JS/CSS.
Note that this would only display/show the stars rating from an already available number and not accept new ratings submissions.
Here\'s a solution for you, using only one very tiny and simple image and one automatically generated span element:
CSS
span.stars, span.stars span {
display: block;
background: url(stars.png) 0 -16px repeat-x;
width: 80px;
height: 16px;
}
span.stars span {
background-position: 0 0;
}
Image
alt text http://www.ulmanen.fi/stuff/stars.png
Note: do NOT hotlink to the above image! Copy the file to your own server and use it from there.
jQuery
$.fn.stars = function() {
return $(this).each(function() {
// Get the value
var val = parseFloat($(this).html());
// Make sure that the value is in 0 - 5 range, multiply to get width
var size = Math.max(0, (Math.min(5, val))) * 16;
// Create stars holder
var $span = $(\'<span />\').width(size);
// Replace the numerical value with stars
$(this).html($span);
});
}
If you want to restrict the stars to only half or quarter star sizes, add one of these rows before the var size
row:
val = Math.round(val * 4) / 4; /* To round to nearest quarter */
val = Math.round(val * 2) / 2; /* To round to nearest half */
HTML
<span class=\"stars\">4.8618164</span>
<span class=\"stars\">2.6545344</span>
<span class=\"stars\">0.5355</span>
<span class=\"stars\">8</span>
Usage
$(function() {
$(\'span.stars\').stars();
});
Output
Image from fugue icon set (www.pinvoke.com) http://www.ulmanen.fi/stuff/stars_output.png
Demo
http://www.ulmanen.fi/stuff/stars.php
This will probably suit your needs. With this method you don\'t have to calculate any three quarter or whatnot star widths, just give it a float and it\'ll give you your stars.
A small explanation on how the stars are presented might be in order.
The script creates two block level span elements. Both of the spans initally get a size of 80px * 16px and a background image stars.png. The spans are nested, so that the structure of the spans looks like this:
<span class=\"stars\">
<span></span>
</span>
The outer span gets a background-position
of 0 -16px
. That makes the gray stars in the outer span visible. As the outer span has height of 16px and repeat-x
, it will only show 5 gray stars.
The inner span on the other hand has a background-position
of 0 0
which makes only the yellow stars visible.
This would of course work with two separate imagefiles, star_yellow.png and star_gray.png. But as the stars have a fixed height, we can easily combine them into one image. This utilizes the CSS sprite technique.
Now, as the spans are nested, they are automatically overlayed over each other. In the default case, when the width of both spans is 80px, the yellow stars completely obscure the grey stars.
But when we adjust the width of the inner span, the width of the yellow stars decreases, revealing the gray stars.
Accessibility-wise, it would have been wiser to leave the float number inside the inner span and hide it with text-indent: -9999px
, so that people with CSS turned off would at least see the floating point number instead of the stars.
Hopefully that made some sense.
Updated 2010/10/22
Now even more compact and harder to understand! Can also be squeezed down to a one liner:
$.fn.stars = function() {
return $(this).each(function() {
$(this).html($(\'<span />\').width(Math.max(0, (Math.min(5, parseFloat($(this).html())))) * 16));
});
}
If you only have to support modern browsers, you can get away with:
- No images;
- Mostly static css;
- Nearly no jQuery or Javascript;
You only need to convert the number to a class
, e.g. class=\'stars-score-50\'
.
First a demo of \"rendered\" markup:
body { font-size: 18px; }
.stars-container {
position: relative;
display: inline-block;
color: transparent;
}
.stars-container:before {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: \'★★★★★\';
color: lightgray;
}
.stars-container:after {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: \'★★★★★\';
color: gold;
overflow: hidden;
}
.stars-0:after { width: 0%; }
.stars-10:after { width: 10%; }
.stars-20:after { width: 20%; }
.stars-30:after { width: 30%; }
.stars-40:after { width: 40%; }
.stars-50:after { width: 50%; }
.stars-60:after { width: 60%; }
.stars-70:after { width: 70%; }
.stars-80:after { width: 80%; }
.stars-90:after { width: 90%; }
.stars-100:after { width: 100; }
Within block level elements:
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-0\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-10\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-20\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-30\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-40\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-50\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-60\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-70\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-80\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-90\">★★★★★</span></div>
<div><span class=\"stars-container stars-100\">★★★★★</span></div>
<p>Or use it in a sentence: <span class=\"stars-container stars-70\">★★★★★</span> (cool, huh?).</p>
Then a demo that uses a wee bit of code:
$(function() {
function addScore(score, $domElement) {
$(\"<span class=\'stars-container\'>\")
.addClass(\"stars-\" + score.toString())
.text(\"★★★★★\")
.appendTo($domElement);
}
addScore(70, $(\"#fixture\"));
});
body { font-size: 18px; }
.stars-container {
position: relative;
display: inline-block;
color: transparent;
}
.stars-container:before {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: \'★★★★★\';
color: lightgray;
}
.stars-container:after {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: \'★★★★★\';
color: gold;
overflow: hidden;
}
.stars-0:after { width: 0%; }
.stars-10:after { width: 10%; }
.stars-20:after { width: 20%; }
.stars-30:after { width: 30%; }
.stars-40:after { width: 40%; }
.stars-50:after { width: 50%; }
.stars-60:after { width: 60%; }
.stars-70:after { width: 70%; }
.stars-80:after { width: 80%; }
.stars-90:after { width: 90%; }
.stars-100:after { width: 100; }
<script src=\"https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js\"></script>
Generated: <div id=\"fixture\"></div>
The biggest downsides of this solution are:
- You need the stars inside the element to generate correct width;
- There\'s no semantic markup, e.g. you\'d prefer the score as text inside the element;
- It only allows for as many scores as you\'ll have classes (because we can\'t use Javascript to set a precise
width
on a pseudo-element).
To fix this the solution above can be easily tweaked. The :before
and :after
bits need to become actual elements in the DOM (so we need some JS for that).
The latter is left as an excercise for the reader.
Try this jquery function
<link href=\"https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/font-awesome/4.6.3/css/font-awesome.min.css\" rel=\"stylesheet\">
<span class=\"stars\" data-rating=\"4\" data-num-stars=\"5\" ></span>
<script>
$.fn.stars = function() {
return $(this).each(function() {
var rating = $(this).data(\"rating\");
var numStars = $(this).data(\"numStars\");
var fullStar = new Array(Math.floor(rating + 1)).join(\'<i class=\"fa fa-star\"></i>\');
var halfStar = ((rating%1) !== 0) ? \'<i class=\"fa fa-star-half-empty\"></i>\': \'\';
var noStar = new Array(Math.floor(numStars + 1 - rating)).join(\'<i class=\"fa fa-star-o\"></i>\');
$(this).html(fullStar + halfStar + noStar);
});
}
$(\'.stars\').stars();
FontAwesome CSS
You can download FontAwesome at http://fontawesome.io/
Why not just have five separate images of a star (empty, quarter-full, half-full, three-quarter-full and full) then just inject the images into your DOM depending on the truncated or rouded value of rating multiplied by 4 (to get a whole numner for the quarters)?
For example, 4.8618164 multiplied by 4 and rounded is 19 which would be four and three quarter stars.
Alternatively (if you\'re lazy like me), just have one image selected from 21 (0 stars through 5 stars in one-quarter increments) and select the single image based on the aforementioned value. Then it\'s just one calculation followed by an image change in the DOM (rather than trying to change five different images).
I ended up going totally JS-free to avoid client-side render lag. To accomplish that, I generate HTML like this:
<span class=\"stars\" title=\"{value as decimal}\">
<span style=\"width={value/5*100}%;\"/>
</span>
To help with accessibility, I even add the raw rating value in the title attribute.
using jquery without prototype, update the js code to
$( \".stars\" ).each(function() {
// Get the value
var val = $(this).data(\"rating\");
// Make sure that the value is in 0 - 5 range, multiply to get width
var size = Math.max(0, (Math.min(5, val))) * 16;
// Create stars holder
var $span = $(\'<span />\').width(size);
// Replace the numerical value with stars
$(this).html($span);
});
I also added a data attribute by the name of data-rating in the span.
<span class=\"stars\" data-rating=\"4\" ></span>
DEMO
You can do it with 2 images only. 1 blank stars, 1 filled stars.
Overlay filled image on the top of the other one. and convert rating number into percentage and use it as width of fillter image.
.containerdiv {
border: 0;
float: left;
position: relative;
width: 300px;
}
.cornerimage {
border: 0;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
overflow: hidden;
}
img{
max-width: 300px;
}