Move stuff between these two containers. Note how the stuff gets inserted near the mouse pointer?
Great stuff.
You can move these elements between these two containers
Moving them anywhere else isn't quite possible
Anything can be moved around. That includes images,
links , or any other nested elements.
(You can still click on links, as usual!)
There's also the possibility of moving elements around in the same container, changing their
position
This is the default use case. You only need to specify the containers you want to use
More interactive use cases lie ahead
Moving <input/>
elements works just fine. You can still focus them, too.
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)]);
There are plenty of events along the lifetime of a drag event. Check out
all of them in the docs!
As soon as you start dragging an element, a
drag
event is fired
Whenever an element is cloned because
copy: true
, a cloned
event fires
The shadow
event fires whenever the placeholder showing where an element would
be dropped is moved to a different container or position
A drop
event is fired whenever an element is dropped anywhere other than its
origin
(where it was initially dragged from)
If the element gets removed from the DOM as a result of dropping outside of any containers,
a
remove
event gets fired
A cancel
event is fired when an element would be dropped onto an invalid
target, but retains its original placement instead
The over
event fires when you drag something over a container, and
out
fires when you drag it away from the container
Lastly, a dragend
event is fired whenever a drag operation ends, regardless of
whether it ends in a cancellation, removal, or drop
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)])
.on('drag', function (el) {
el.className = el.className.replace('ex-moved', '');
}).on('drop', function (el) {
el.className += ' ex-moved';
}).on('over', function (el, container) {
container.className += ' ex-over';
}).on('out', function (el, container) {
container.className = container.className.replace('ex-over', '');
});
Need to be able to quickly delete stuff when it spills out of the chosen containers? Note how you
can easily sort the items in any containers by just dragging and dropping.
Anxious Cab Driver
Thriving Venture
Calm Clam
Banana Boat
Orange Juice
Cuban Cigar
Terrible Comedian
dragula([document.getElementById(single)], {
removeOnSpill: true
});
By default, dropping an element outside of any known containers will keep the element in the last
place it went over. You can make elements go back to origin if they're dropped outside of known
containers, too.
Moving items between containers works as usual
If you try to drop an item outside of any containers, though, it'll retain its original
position
When that happens, a cancel
event will be raised
Note that the dragged element will go back to the place you originally dragged it from, even
if you move it over other containers
This is useful if you want to ensure drop events only happen when the user intends for them
to happen explicitly, avoiding surprises
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)], {
revertOnSpill: true
});
Copying stuff is common too, so we made it easy for you.
When elements are copyable, they can't be sorted in their origin container
Copying prevents original elements from being dragged. A copy gets created and
that gets dragged instead
Whenever that happens, a cloned
event is raised
Note that the clones get destroyed if they're not dropped into another container
You'll be dragging a copy, so when they're dropped into another container you'll see the
duplication.
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)], {
copy: true
});
Copying stuff from only one of the containers and sorting on the other one? No problem!
When elements are copyable, they can't be sorted in their origin container
Copying prevents original elements from being dragged. A copy gets created and
that gets dragged instead
Whenever that happens, a cloned
event is raised
Note that the clones get destroyed if they're not dropped into another container
You'll be dragging a copy, so when they're dropped into another container you'll see the
duplication.
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)], {
copy: function (el, source) {
return source === document.getElementById(left)
},
accepts: function (el, target) {
return target !== document.getElementById(left)
}
});
Drag handles float your cruise?
+ Move me, but you can use the plus sign to drag me around.
+ Note that handle
element in the
moves
handler is just the original event target.
+ This might also be useful if you want multiple children of an
element to be able to trigger a drag event.
+ You can also use the moves
option to determine
whether an element can be dragged at all from a container, drag handle or not .
dragula([document.getElementById(left), document.getElementById(right)], {
moves: function (el, container, handle) {
return handle.className === 'handle';
}
});
There are a few similar mechanisms to determine whether an element can be dragged from a certain
container
(moves
) , whether an
element can be dropped into a certain container at a certain position
(accepts
) , and whether
an element is able to originate a drag event
(invalid
) .
Click or Drag! Fires a click when the mouse button is released before a
mousemove
event, otherwise a drag event is fired. No extra configuration is
necessary.
Clicking on these elements triggers a regular
click
event you can listen to.
Try dragging or clicking on this element.
Note how you can click normally?
Drags don't trigger click events.
Clicks don't end up in a drag, either.
This is useful if you have elements that can be both clicked or dragged.
dragula([document.getElementById(container)]);