CSS pointer-event property is used to control how an element responds to pointer events such as mouse clicks, mouseovers, and mouse movements. It allows you to specify whether an element should receive pointer events and whether those events should trigger actions like clicking or hovering.
Possible Values
- auto − : This is the default value. It indicates that the element behaves as normal and responds to pointer events based on its specified CSS properties and content. In SVG content, this value and visiblePainted have the same effect.
- none − This value indicates that the element should not respond to pointer events. Clicks, hover effects, and other interactions will pass through the element as if it were not there, and the elements beneath it will receive those events instead.
- visiblePainted − This value indicates that the element does not receive pointer events unless they are triggered on a visible, painted area of the element. Transparent areas within the element do not respond to pointer events..
- visibleFill − Similar to visiblePainted, this value indicates that the element only responds to pointer events triggered on visible, painted areas or the fill of the element, ignoring pointer events on transparent areas.
- visibleStroke − Similar to visiblePainted and visibleFill, this value indicates that the element only responds to pointer events triggered on visible, painted areas or the stroke of the element, ignoring pointer events on transparent areas.
- visible − Targets pointer events only when the visibility is set to visible. and the mouse cursor is over its interior (fill) or perimeter (stroke), with the fill and stroke values not affecting event processing
- painted − This value indicates that the element only responds to pointer events triggered on its painted content. Transparent areas within the element do not respond to pointer events.
- fill − Similar to painted, this value indicates that the element only responds to pointer events triggered on its fill, ignoring events on transparent areas.
- stroke − Similar to painted and fill, this value indicates that the element only responds to pointer events triggered on its stroke, ignoring events on transparent areas.
- all − Targets to pointer events when the pointer is over their interior (fill) or perimeter (stroke). The fill, stroke and visibility properties values are unaffected.
Applies To
All elements.
Syntax
pointer-event: auto | none | visiblePainted | visibleFill | visibleStroke | visible | painted | fill | stroke | all;
Points To Remember
When this property is not defined, SVG content has the same properties as the visiblePainted value.
The “one value in pointer events not only makes the element the target rather than the pointer event, but it also allows the event to pass through, targeting what is underneath the element.
Disabling pointer events on an element using pointer-events does not mean that event listeners will not be triggered. If a child of that element has pointer-events enabled to allow it to be the event target, events aimed at the child will pass via the parent, potentially triggering event listeners. However, if the pointer activity occurs in an area only covered by the parent, it will be missed by both the child and the parent.
Elements with pointer-events: none will still get focus via sequential keyboard navigation with the Tab key.
CSS pointer-event – none Value
The following example demonstrates how the pointer-event: none property disables the hyperlink from being clicked −
<html><head><style>
a[href="https://tutorialspoint_css_pointer-event.com"] {
pointer-events: none;
}
</style></head><body><a href="https://tutorialspoint_css_pointer-event.com">css_pointer-event</a></body></html>
CSS pointer-event – auto Value
The following example demonstrates the pointer-event: auto property allows the anchor element to be clickable −
<html><head><style>
a[href="https://tutorialspoint_css_pointer-event.com"] {
pointer-events: auto;
}
</style></head><body><a href="https://tutorialspoint_css_pointer-event.com">css_pointer-event</a></body></html>
CSS pointer-event – Disabling Pointer Events on Images
The following example demonstrates the pointer-event: auto property disables pointer events (clicking, hovering, etc.) on an images −
<html><head><style>
img {
height: 100px;
width: 100px;
pointer-events: none;
}
</style></head><body><img src="images/pink-flower.jpg" alt="pink-flower"></body></html>
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