MooTools Event Methods.

Syntax:

new Event([event[, win]]);

Arguments:

  1. event - (event, required) An HTMLEvent Object.
  2. win - (window, optional: defaults to window) The context of the event.

Properties:

  • page.x - (number) The x position of the mouse, relative to the full window.
  • page.y - (number) The y position of the mouse, relative to the full window.
  • client.x - (number) The x position of the mouse, relative to the viewport.
  • client.y - (number) The y position of the mouse, relative to the viewport.
  • rightClick - (boolean) True if the user clicked the right mousebutton
  • wheel - (number) The amount of third button scrolling.
  • relatedTarget - (element) The event related target.
  • target - (element) The event target.
  • code - (number) The keycode of the key pressed.
  • key - (string) The key pressed as a lowercase string. key can be 'enter', 'up', 'down', 'left', 'right', 'space', 'backspace', 'delete', and 'esc'.
  • shift - (boolean) True if the user pressed the shift key.
  • control - (boolean) True if the user pressed the control key.
  • alt - (boolean) True if the user pressed the alt key.
  • meta - (boolean) True if the user pressed the meta key.

Examples:

$('myLink').addEvent('keydown', function(event){
     // the passed event parameter is already an instance of the Event class.
    alert(event.key);   // returns the lowercase letter pressed.
    alert(event.shift); // returns true if the key pressed is shift.
    if (event.key == 's' && event.control) alert('Document saved.'); //executes if the user presses Ctr+S.
});

Notes:

  • Accessing event.page / event.client requires the page to be in Standards Mode.
  • Every event added with addEvent gets the MooTools method automatically, without the need to manually instance it.

Stop an Event from propagating and also executes preventDefault.

Syntax:

myEvent.stop();

Returns:

  • (object) This Event instance.

Examples:

HTML:
<a id="myAnchor" href="http://google.com/">Visit Google.com</a>
JavaScript
$('myAnchor').addEvent('click', function(event){
    event.stop(); //Prevents the browser from following the link.
    this.set('text', 'Where do you think you\'re going?'); //'this' is Element that fires the Event.
    (function(){
        this.set('text','Instead visit the Blog.').set('href', 'http://blog.mootools.net');
    }).delay(500, this);
});

Notes:

  • Returning false within the function can also stop the propagation of the Event.

See Also:

Cross browser method to stop the propagation of an event (this stops the event from bubbling up through the DOM).

Syntax:

myEvent.stopPropagation();

Returns:

  • (object) This Event object.

Examples:

"#myChild" does not cover the same area as myElement. Therefore, the 'click' differs from parent and child depending on the click location:

HTML:
<div id="myElement">
    <div id="myChild"></div>
</div>
JavaScript
$('myElement').addEvent('click', function(){
    alert('click');
    return false; //equivalent to stopPropagation.
});
$('myChild').addEvent('click', function(event){
    event.stopPropagation(); //prevents the event from bubbling up, and fires the parent's click event.
});

See Also:

Cross browser method to prevent the default action of the event.

Syntax:

myEvent.preventDefault();

Returns:

  • (object) This Event object.

Examples:

HTML:
<form>
    <input id="myCheckbox" type="checkbox" />
</form>
JavaScript
$('myCheckbox').addEvent('click', function(event){
    event.preventDefault(); //prevents the checkbox from being "checked".
});

See Also:

Additional Event key codes can be added by adding properties to the Event.Keys Object.

Example:

Event.Keys.shift = 16;
$('myInput').addEvent('keydown', function(event){
    if (event.key == 'shift') alert('You pressed shift.');
});

Possible Keys:

  • enter
  • up
  • down
  • left
  • right
  • esc
  • space
  • backspace
  • tab
  • delete

See Also:

Note:

Since MooTools 1.3 this is a native JavaScript Object and not an instance of the deprecated Hash