Overlays are extensions of Modules and differ in the sense that the float above the normal page flow. They can be positioned in three different ways: By fixing them to the center of the viewport (overlay1 below), by specifying a position (overlay2), and by positioning them relative to a context element (overlay3).
Use the buttons in the example below to show and hide the three Overlay instances.
The Overlay Control is an extension of Module; its role is to facilitate the creation of modular content that is absolutely positioned above the flow of a page. It adds additional functionality to Module, including methods for positioning, multiple custom events for monitoring internal property changes, and a built-in <iframe>
solution for dealing with <select>
element bleed-through in Internet Explorer.
Overlay is fundamentally a building block for other UI controls. The concepts presented in this example will form the basis for the way that you interact with all of its subclasses, including Panel and Dialog.
In this tutorial we will build three Overlays with different types of positioning. One of them will be based on existing markup; the other two will be created dynamically using script. In addition to instantiating the Overlays, we will also use the constructor to pass configuration properties for each of our Overlays.
These Overlays introduce a few configuration properties. The fixedcenter
property, when set to true, will force the Overlay to always be positioned in the center of the viewport — even when the window is scrolled or resized. The visible
property determines whether the Overlay should be visible, and the width
property allows a CSS width to be set for the Overlay. In addition, basic pixel-based positioning is available via the xy
property, which can also be split into separate properties (x
and y
).
The context
property, as shown in overlay3
, takes an array of arguments. The first argument in the array is the id of the element to which we want to anchor the Overlay. In this case, that element is a <div&rt;
with an id of ctx
. The next two arguments specify the positioning of the Overlay — tl
and bl
mean, "Anchor my Overlay's top left corner to my context element's bottom left corner." (Other possible values include tr
and br
for "top right" and "bottom right", respectively.)
In the next step, we will define CSS styles that allow us to see a clear visual representation of our Overlays; remember, Overlays are building blocks for other controls and as such they are not styled by default. We will also style our ctx
context element so that it's easy to see:
The markup for overlay1
, plus the context element ctx
and the buttons to show all our Overlays, is displayed below. Note that overlay1
has an inline style of visibility:hidden
set in advance. Most browsers are slower to render CSS than inline styles, and we want this marked-up Overlay to be hidden by default. If the inline style isn't present, it may cause a brief "flash of unstyled content" where the Overlay may be visible on slower machines.
Note: You are viewing this example in debug mode with logging enabled. This can significantly slow performance.
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