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Ipad/iphone Double Click Problem

I'm having a very similar problem to iPad/iPhone hover problem causes the user to double click a link where a user tapping a link has to tap twice to actually go to it. I implemen

Solution 1:

Here's what I ended up doing:

The problem is that touchstart and touchend only know about touch events, not scroll events, so they only react to starting the touch and ending the touch. What we have to do is distinguish between scrolling and not scrolling. Here's what I did:

$('a')
    .live('touchstart', function(){
        isScrolling = false;
    })
    .live('touchmove', function(e){
        isScrolling = true;
    })
    .live('touchend', function(e){
        if( !isScrolling )
        {
            window.location = $(this).attr('href');
        }
    });

This does these things in order:

  1. When touch is first recorded, set isScrolling to false.
  2. When touch is moved, set isScrolling to true. This will not happen if the touch doesn't move.
  3. When touch is stopped, if scrolling has not happened, redirect the page to the link's href.

Edit: A while after this, I discovered the problem was being caused by SuperFish. Disabling superfish when the page was under a certain width solved the problem.

Solution 2:

My advice is to:

  • Add hover effects on touchstart and mouseenter.
  • Remove hover effects on mouseleave, touchmove and click.

This is similar to Jake's answer, but removes the need to emulate the click event.

Background

In order to simulate a mouse, browsers such as Webkit mobile fire the following events if a user touches and releases a finger on touch screen (like iPad) (source: Touch And Mouse on html5rocks.com):

  1. touchstart
  2. touchmove
  3. touchend
  4. 300ms delay, where the browser makes sure this is a single tap, not a double tap
  5. mouseover
  6. mouseenter
    • Note: If a mouseover, mouseenter or mousemove event changes the page content, the following events are never fired.
  7. mousemove
  8. mousedown
  9. mouseup
  10. click

It does not seem possible to simply tell the webbrowser to skip the mouse events.

What's worse, if a mouseover event changes the page content, the click event is never fired, as explained on Safari Web Content Guide - Handling Events, in particular figure 6.4 in One-Finger Events. What exactly a "content change" is, will depend on browser and version. I've found that for iOS 7.0, a change in background color is not (or no longer?) a content change.

Solution Explained

To recap:

  • Add hover effects on touchstart and mouseenter.
  • Remove hover effects on mouseleave, touchmove and click.

Note that there is no action on touchend!

This clearly works for mouse events: mouseenter and mouseleave (slightly improved versions of mouseover and mouseout) are fired, and add and remove the hover.

If the user actually clicks a link, the hover effect is also removed. This ensure that it is removed if the user presses the back button in the web browser.

This also works for touch events: on touchstart the hover effect is added. It is '''not''' removed on touchend. It is added again on mouseenter, and since this causes no content changes (it was already added), the click event is also fired, and the link is followed without the need for the user to click again!

The 300ms delay that a browser has between a touchstart event and click is actually put in good use because the hover effect will be shown during this short time.

If the user decides to cancel the click, a move of the finger will do so just as normal. Normally, this is a problem since no mouseleave event is fired, and the hover effect remains in place. Thankfully, this can easily be fixed by removing the hover effect on touchmove.

That's it!

Note that it is possible to remove the 300ms delay, for example using the FastClick library, but this is out of scope for this question.

Alternative Solutions

I've found the following problems with the following alternatives:

  • browser detection: Extremely prone to errors. Assumes that a device has either mouse or touch, while a combination of both will become more and more common when touch displays prolifirate.
  • CSS media detection: The only CSS-only solution I'm aware of. Still prone to errors, and still assumes that a device has either mouse or touch, while both are possible.
  • Emulate the click event in touchend: This will incorrectly follow the link, even if the user only wanted to scroll or zoom, without the intention of actually clicking the link.
  • Use a variable to suppress mouse events: This set a variable in touchend that is used as a if-condition in subsequent mouse events to prevents state changes at that point in time. The variable is reset in the click event. This is a decent solution if you really don't want a hover effect on touch interfaces. Unfortunately, this does not work if a touchend is fired for another reason and no click event is fired (e.g. the user scrolled or zoomed), and is subsequently trying to following the link with a mouse (i.e on a device with both mouse and touch interface).

Further Reading

See also Disable hover effects on mobile browsers.

Solution 3:

If your content is in a UIScrollView, you can (or may already have) implemented the UIScrollViewDelegate; which contains the following method:

-(void)scrollViewDidScroll: (UIScrollView*)scrollView

If you use this, and get the following:

floatoffset= scrollView.contentOffset.y;

if (offset>0)
    //then we have started toscroll

If you use this condition in conjunction with detecting the number of taps/presses currently on the screen, (ie, just one in your case) then ignore any fired calls (if >1 taps) that may occur when a link is tapped.

Hope this helps!

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