I thought this would be a simple hack, but I've now been searching for hours and can't seen to find the right search term. I want to have an ordinary multiple select box (<select multiple="multiple">
) except I don't want the user to have to hold down the control key to make multiple selections.
In other words, I want a left click to toggle the <option>
element that's under the cursor without changing any of the others. In other other words, I want something that looks like a combo list box but behaves like a group of check boxes.
Can anybody suggest a simple way to do this in Javascript? Thanks.
Check this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/xQqbR/1022/
You basically need to override the
mousedown
event for each<option>
and toggle theselected
property there.For simplicity, I've given 'option' as the selector above. You can fine tune it to match
<option>s
under specific<select>
element(s). For ex:$('#mymultiselect option')
I had same problem today, generally the advice is to use a list of hidden checkboxes and emulate the behavior via css, in this way is more easy to manage but in my case i don't want to modify html.
At the moment i've tested this code only with google chrome, i don't know if works with other browser but it should:
Of course suggestions are welcome but I have not found another way
Had to solve this problem myself and noticed the bugged behavior a simple interception of the
mousedown
and setting the attribute would have, so made a override of the select element and it works good.jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/51p7ocLw/
Note: This code does fix buggy behavior by replacing the select element in the DOM. This is a bit agressive and will break event handlers you might have attached to the element.
Necromancing.
The selected answer without jQuery.
Also, it missed setting the focus when an option is clicked, because you have to do this yourself, if you write e.preventDefault...
Forgetting to do focus would affect CSS-styling, e.g. bootstrap, etc.
techfoobar's answer is buggy, it unselects all options if you drag the mouse.
Sergio's answer is interesting, but cloning and removing events-bound to a dropdown is not a nice thing.
Try this answer.
Note: Doesn't work on Firefox, but works perfectly on Safari/Chrome/Opera. (I didn't test it on IE)