Bruce Lawson with the tip of the day, warning against the use of pointer-events: none
on forms labels. We know that pointer-events
is used to change how elements respond to click, tap, hover, and active states. But it apparently borks form labels, squashing their active hit target size to something small and tough to interact with. Bruce includes examples in his post.
That’s not the striking part of the post though. It’s that the issue was pinned to an implementation of Material Design’s floating labels component. Bruce fortunately had pointer events expert Patrick Lauke’s ear, who pointed (get it?) out the issue.
aha, now i remember when i first saw a few weeks ago – testing something based on material design for web https://t.co/YkEKXkU0To pic.twitter.com/31S74X1i4R
— patrick h. lauke #toryScum #clapForFlagWankers (@patrick_h_lauke) February 5, 2021
That isn’t a dig at frameworks. It’s just the reality of things. Front-end developers gotta be aware, and that includes awareness of third-party code.
Direct Link to Article — Permalink
The post Don’t put pointer-events: none on form labels appeared first on CSS-Tricks.
You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.
source https://www.brucelawson.co.uk/2021/dont-put-pointer-events-none-on-form-labels/
No comments:
Post a Comment