Droppable Widgetversion added: 1.0
Description: Create targets for draggable elements.
The jQuery UI Droppable plugin makes selected elements droppable (meaning they accept being dropped on by draggables). You can specify which draggables each will accept.
Theming
The droppable widget uses the jQuery UI CSS framework to style its look and feel. If droppable specific styling is needed, the following CSS class names can be used for overrides or as keys for the classes option:
-
ui-droppable: The droppable element. When a draggable that can be dropped on this dropppable is activated, theui-droppable-activeclass is added. When dragging a draggable over this droppable, theui-droppable-hoverclass is added.
Dependencies
Options
accept
"*" - Selector: A selector indicating which draggable elements are accepted.
- Function: A function that will be called for each draggable on the page (passed as the first argument to the function). The function must return
trueif the draggable should be accepted.
Initialize the droppable with the accept option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
accept: ".special"
}); Get or set the accept option, after initialization:
// Getter var accept = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "accept" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "accept", ".special" );
activeClass
false If specified, the class will be added to the droppable while an acceptable draggable is being dragged.
The activeClass option has been deprecated in favor of the classes option, using the ui-droppable-active property.
Initialize the droppable with the activeClass option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
activeClass: "ui-state-highlight"
}); Get or set the activeClass option, after initialization:
// Getter var activeClass = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "activeClass" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "activeClass", "ui-state-highlight" );
addClasses
true false, will prevent the ui-droppable class from being added. This may be desired as a performance optimization when calling .droppable() init on hundreds of elements.Initialize the droppable with the addClasses option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
addClasses: false
}); Get or set the addClasses option, after initialization:
// Getter var addClasses = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "addClasses" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "addClasses", false );
classes
{} Specify additional classes to add to the widget's elements. Any of classes specified in the Theming section can be used as keys to override their value. To learn more about this option, check out the learn article about the classes option.
Initialize the droppable with the classes option specified, changing the theming for the ui-droppable class:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
classes: {
"ui-droppable": "highlight"
}
}); Get or set a property of the classes option, after initialization, here reading and changing the theming for the ui-droppable class:
// Getter var themeClass = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "classes.ui-droppable" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "classes.ui-droppable", "highlight" );
disabled
false true.Initialize the droppable with the disabled option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
disabled: true
}); Get or set the disabled option, after initialization:
// Getter var disabled = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "disabled" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "disabled", true );
greedy
false true, any parent droppables will not receive the element. The drop event will still bubble normally, but the event.target can be checked to see which droppable received the draggable element.Initialize the droppable with the greedy option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
greedy: true
}); Get or set the greedy option, after initialization:
// Getter var greedy = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "greedy" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "greedy", true );
hoverClass
false If specified, the class will be added to the droppable while an acceptable draggable is being hovered over the droppable.
The hoverClass option has been deprecated in favor of the classes option, using the ui-droppable-hover property.
Initialize the droppable with the hoverClass option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
hoverClass: "drop-hover"
}); Get or set the hoverClass option, after initialization:
// Getter var hoverClass = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "hoverClass" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "hoverClass", "drop-hover" );
scope
"default" accept option. A draggable with the same scope value as a droppable will be accepted.Initialize the droppable with the scope option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
scope: "tasks"
}); Get or set the scope option, after initialization:
// Getter var scope = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "scope" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "scope", "tasks" );
tolerance
"intersect" -
"fit": Draggable overlaps the droppable entirely. -
"intersect": Draggable overlaps the droppable at least 50% in both directions. -
"pointer": Mouse pointer overlaps the droppable. -
"touch": Draggable overlaps the droppable any amount.
Initialize the droppable with the tolerance option specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
tolerance: "fit"
}); Get or set the tolerance option, after initialization:
// Getter var tolerance = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "tolerance" ); // Setter $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "tolerance", "fit" );
Methods
destroy()Returns: jQuery (plugin only)
- This method does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the destroy method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "destroy" );
disable()Returns: jQuery (plugin only)
- This method does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the disable method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "disable" );
enable()Returns: jQuery (plugin only)
- This method does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the enable method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "enable" );
instance()Returns: Object
Retrieves the droppable's instance object. If the element does not have an associated instance, undefined is returned.
Unlike other widget methods, instance() is safe to call on any element after the droppable plugin has loaded.
- This method does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the instance method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "instance" );
option( optionName )Returns: Object
Gets the value currently associated with the specified optionName.
Note: For options that have objects as their value, you can get the value of a specific key by using dot notation. For example, "foo.bar" would get the value of the bar property on the foo option.
- optionNameType: StringThe name of the option to get.
Invoke the method:
var isDisabled = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "disabled" );
option()Returns: PlainObject
- This signature does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the method:
var options = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "option" );
option( optionName, value )Returns: jQuery (plugin only)
Sets the value of the droppable option associated with the specified optionName.
Note: For options that have objects as their value, you can set the value of just one property by using dot notation for optionName. For example, "foo.bar" would update only the bar property of the foo option.
- optionNameType: StringThe name of the option to set.
- valueType: ObjectA value to set for the option.
Invoke the method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", "disabled", true );
option( options )Returns: jQuery (plugin only)
- optionsType: ObjectA map of option-value pairs to set.
Invoke the method:
$( ".selector" ).droppable( "option", { disabled: true } ); widget()Returns: jQuery
jQuery object containing the droppable element. - This method does not accept any arguments.
Invoke the widget method:
var widget = $( ".selector" ).droppable( "widget" );
Events
activate( event, ui )Type: dropactivate
- eventType: Event
- uiType: Object
- draggableType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the draggable element.
- helperType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the helper that is being dragged.
- positionType: ObjectCurrent CSS position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object. - offsetType: ObjectCurrent offset position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object.
-
Initialize the droppable with the activate callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
activate: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the dropactivate event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "dropactivate", function( event, ui ) {} ); create( event, ui )Type: dropcreate
Note: The ui object is empty but included for consistency with other events.
Initialize the droppable with the create callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
create: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the dropcreate event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "dropcreate", function( event, ui ) {} ); deactivate( event, ui )Type: dropdeactivate
- eventType: Event
- uiType: Object
- draggableType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the draggable element.
- helperType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the helper that is being dragged.
- positionType: ObjectCurrent CSS position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object. - offsetType: ObjectCurrent offset position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object.
-
Initialize the droppable with the deactivate callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
deactivate: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the dropdeactivate event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "dropdeactivate", function( event, ui ) {} ); drop( event, ui )Type: drop
tolerance option).- eventType: Event
- uiType: Object
- draggableType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the draggable element.
- helperType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the helper that is being dragged.
- positionType: ObjectCurrent CSS position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object. - offsetType: ObjectCurrent offset position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object.
-
Initialize the droppable with the drop callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
drop: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the drop event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "drop", function( event, ui ) {} ); out( event, ui )Type: dropout
tolerance option).Note: The ui object is empty but included for consistency with other events.
Initialize the droppable with the out callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
out: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the dropout event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "dropout", function( event, ui ) {} ); over( event, ui )Type: dropover
tolerance option).- eventType: Event
- uiType: Object
- draggableType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the draggable element.
- helperType: jQueryA jQuery object representing the helper that is being dragged.
- positionType: ObjectCurrent CSS position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object. - offsetType: ObjectCurrent offset position of the draggable helper as
{ top, left }object.
-
Initialize the droppable with the over callback specified:
$( ".selector" ).droppable({
over: function( event, ui ) {}
}); Bind an event listener to the dropover event:
$( ".selector" ).on( "dropover", function( event, ui ) {} ); Example:
A pair of draggable and droppable elements.
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>droppable demo</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="//code.jquery.com/ui/1.12.1/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.css">
<style>
#draggable {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
background: #ccc;
}
#droppable {
position: absolute;
left: 250px;
top: 0;
width: 125px;
height: 125px;
background: #999;
color: #fff;
padding: 10px;
}
</style>
<script src="//code.jquery.com/jquery-1.12.4.js"></script>
<script src="//code.jquery.com/ui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="droppable">Drop here</div>
<div id="draggable">Drag me</div>
<script>
$( "#draggable" ).draggable();
$( "#droppable" ).droppable({
drop: function() {
alert( "dropped" );
}
});
</script>
</body>
</html>