Element: mouseout event
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The mouseout event is fired at an Element when a pointing device (usually a mouse) is used to move the cursor so that it is no longer contained within the element or one of its children.
mouseout is also delivered to an element if the cursor enters a child element, because the child element obscures the visible area of the element.
If the target element has child elements, mouseout and mouseover events fire as the mouse moves over the boundaries of these elements too, not just the target element itself. Usually, mouseenter and mouseleave events' behavior is more sensible, because they are not affected by moving into child elements.
Syntax
Use the event name in methods like addEventListener(), or set an event handler property.
addEventListener("mouseout", (event) => { })
onmouseout = (event) => { }
Event type
A MouseEvent. Inherits from UIEvent and Event.
Event properties
This interface also inherits properties of its parents, UIEvent and Event.
MouseEvent.altKeyRead only-
Returns
trueif the alt key was down when the mouse event was fired. -
The button number that was pressed (if applicable) when the mouse event was fired.
-
The buttons being pressed (if any) when the mouse event was fired.
MouseEvent.clientXRead only-
The X coordinate of the mouse pointer in viewport coordinates.
MouseEvent.clientYRead only-
The Y coordinate of the mouse pointer in viewport coordinates.
MouseEvent.ctrlKeyRead only-
Returns
trueif the control key was down when the mouse event was fired. MouseEvent.layerXNon-standard Read only-
Returns the horizontal coordinate of the event relative to the current layer.
MouseEvent.layerYNon-standard Read only-
Returns the vertical coordinate of the event relative to the current layer.
MouseEvent.metaKeyRead only-
Returns
trueif the meta key was down when the mouse event was fired. MouseEvent.movementXRead only-
The X coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the position of the last
mousemoveevent. MouseEvent.movementYRead only-
The Y coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the position of the last
mousemoveevent. MouseEvent.offsetXRead only-
The X coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the position of the padding edge of the target node.
MouseEvent.offsetYRead only-
The Y coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the position of the padding edge of the target node.
MouseEvent.pageXRead only-
The X coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the whole document.
MouseEvent.pageYRead only-
The Y coordinate of the mouse pointer relative to the whole document.
-
The secondary target for the event, if there is one.
MouseEvent.screenXRead only-
The X coordinate of the mouse pointer in screen coordinates.
MouseEvent.screenYRead only-
The Y coordinate of the mouse pointer in screen coordinates.
MouseEvent.shiftKeyRead only-
Returns
trueif the shift key was down when the mouse event was fired. MouseEvent.mozInputSourceNon-standard Read only-
The type of device that generated the event (one of the
MOZ_SOURCE_*constants). This lets you, for example, determine whether a mouse event was generated by an actual mouse or by a touch event (which might affect the degree of accuracy with which you interpret the coordinates associated with the event). MouseEvent.webkitForceNon-standard Read only-
The amount of pressure applied when clicking.
MouseEvent.xRead only-
Alias for
MouseEvent.clientX. MouseEvent.yRead only-
Alias for
MouseEvent.clientY.
Examples
The following examples show the use of the mouseout event.
mouseout and mouseleave
The following example illustrates the difference between mouseout and mouseleave events. The mouseleave event is added to the <ul> to color the list purple whenever the mouse exits the <ul>. mouseout is added to the list to color the targeted element orange when the mouse exits it.
When you try this out, you'll find that mouseout is delivered to the individual list items, while mouseleave goes to the overall list, courtesy of the hierarchy of the items and the fact that list items obscure the underlying <ul>.
HTML
<ul id="test">
<li>item 1</li>
<li>item 2</li>
<li>item 3</li>
</ul>
JavaScript
const test = document.getElementById("test");
// Briefly make the list purple when the mouse moves off the
// <ul> element
test.addEventListener("mouseleave", (event) => {
// highlight the mouseleave target
event.target.style.color = "purple";
// reset the color after a short delay
setTimeout(() => {
event.target.style.color = "";
}, 1000);
});
// Briefly make an <li> orange when the mouse moves off of it
test.addEventListener("mouseout", (event) => {
// highlight the mouseout target
event.target.style.color = "orange";
// reset the color after a short delay
setTimeout(() => {
event.target.style.color = "";
}, 500);
});
Result
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| UI Events> # event-type-mouseout> |
| HTML> # handler-onmouseout> |
Browser compatibility
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