AccordionControl.HtmlElementMouseOut Event
Occurs when a mouse pointer leaves the bounds of an element within an HTML-CSS template.
Namespace: DevExpress.XtraBars.Navigation
Assembly: DevExpress.XtraBars.v24.1.dll
NuGet Package: DevExpress.Win.Navigation
Declaration
Event Data
The HtmlElementMouseOut event's data class is DevExpress.XtraBars.Navigation.AccordionHtmlElementEventArgs.
Remarks
Objects of the DxHtmlElementMouseEventArgs class (and its parent DxHtmlElementEventArgs class) are used inside events and methods that allow you to handle user interactions with HTML elements.
Common Properties
X, Y, Clicks, and Button properties return information about mouse clicks: the mouse button that was clicked, the coordinates of the mouse pointer, and the number of clicks.
You can also read the MouseArgs property to get the same information in an aggregated MouseEventArgs object.
The Bounds property returns the location and actual screen size of an HTML element. For example, the Bounds property for a square <div>
element with 50px sides returns Height
and Width
values of 100 when shown on a display with a 200% Windows scaling option.
Element ID
When you handle template-related control events (for example, HtmlContentControl.ElementMouseClick), these events are raised for any HTML element with which a user interacts.
<div class='buttonPanel'>
<img src="PhoneCall" />
<img src="VideoCall" />
<img src="Message" />
</div>
htmlContentControl.ElementMouseClick += (s, e) => {
// Raises for all three IMG elements
};
To identify which element has triggered an event, assign unique IDs in HTML markup.
<div class='buttonPanel'>
<img id="btnPhone" src="PhoneCall"/>
<img id="btnVideo" src="VideoCall"/>
<img id="btnText" src="Message"/>
</div>
Then you can check the ElementId property value to identify HTML elements.
htmlContentControl.ElementMouseClick += (s, e) => {
if(e.ElementId == "btnPhone")
// Action #1
if(e.ElementId == "btnVideo")
// Action #2
if(e.ElementId == "btnText")
// Action #3
};
Bubbling
The following markup illustrates four <div>
elements nested one inside the other. Each element has its own onclick
method called when users click this specific element.
<div class="container1" onclick="func1">
<div class="container2" onclick="func2">
<div class="container3" onclick="func3">
<div class="container4" onclick="func4">
Click Me
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
/* Important
* Event handlers must be defined within a container control that hosts the HtmlContentControl.
*/
public partial class Form1 : DevExpress.XtraEditors.XtraForm {
// ...
void func1(object sender, DxHtmlElementMouseEventArgs args) {
// Action #1
}
void func2(object sender, DxHtmlElementMouseEventArgs args) {
// Action #2
}
}
Important
Event handlers must be defined within a container control that hosts the HtmlContentControl
(for example, a form or user control).
When a user clicks any element, the onclick
method of this element fires first. After that, each parent HTML element subsequently calls its own onclick
method. For example, if a user clicked the inner div
element with the container4
style, all four methods are called in a sequence (func4 - func3 - func2 - func1).
This process of subsequent child-to-parent element activation is called bubbling, similar to how a bubble of air floats up in the water. The Bubbles property allows you to identify whether an element can pass the mouse event up through the elements tree. You can set the CancelBubble property to true to stop bubbling at this element.
void func1(object sender, DxHtmlElementMouseEventArgs args) {
// Not called automatically when the element with "func2" is clicked
}
void func2(object sender, DxHtmlElementMouseEventArgs args) {
args.CancelBubble = true;
}
Note that the Bubbles
property is an indicator that tells you whether this element has parent elements that can potentially handle the corresponding mouse event. If so, this property returns true even if you enable the CancelBubble
property.
Suppress Control Events
When a user interacts with an HTML & CSS template element, a mouse event bubbles up through the elements tree and finally reaches the templated control itself. For example, when a Data Grid template element is clicked, Data Grid events fire after a sequence of element onclick
methods (for instance, BaseView.Click).
You can enable the SuppressOwnerEvent property to prevent mouse events from reaching a control. In this case the control will not fire its native events.