I was able to verify that it looks slow on FF3 today as well.

If anyone knows of a lighter weight solution, please post.  Thanks.


On Jun 29, 11:41 am, Shaun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello All -
>
> I have the problem where for an image rollover, moving the mouse very
> quickly can leave my roll over 'on' because the mouseout (mouseleave
> seems to do the same thing) doesn't always fire reliably.
>
> I wrote a solution to the problem but I don't like it.  I've posted
> the example here:http://psd2cssonline.com/tutorials/nav/index.html
>
> The important code is this:
>
>   var mouseX, mouseY;
>   $('*').mousemove( function(e) { mouseX = e.pageX; mouseY =
> e.pageY; });
>   setInterval( function () {
>     $('.defHide:visible').each( function() {
>     if( mouseX < $(this).offset().left || mouseX > $
> (this).offset().left + $(this).width() ||
>         mouseY < $(this).offset().top || mouseY > $(this).offset().top
> + $(this).height() )
>     { $(this).trigger( 'mouseout' ); } });
>   }, 100 );
>
> where all of the divs that are to be hidden by default have the class
> defHide added to them.
>
> The technique is kludgy at best however because it works by setting a
> watchdog timer that checks current mouse position against the screen
> space location of any currently visible divs that should by default be
> off. It is CPU consuming and not very elegant. It seems to work fast
> enough in IE7 and Opera (no visual performance degradation) but my FF2
> actually looks slower when this is enabled.
>
> Does anyone know of a better solution to this problem?
>
> Thanks.
>
> --
> Shaun
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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