CSS - Hover passes through elements to activate hover on covered element

you can use pointer-events: none; to the element on top:

div {
   width   : 200px;
   height  : 200px;
   float   : left;
   cursor  : pointer;
   border  : 1px green solid;
}

div + div:hover { background: #a1a6c8; }

div:first-child {
   pointer-events : none;
   position       : absolute;
   top            : 100px;
   left           : 100px;
   border         : 1px green solid;
   background     : #c1c6c8;
}
  <div> on top of all: hover me </div>
  <div>1</div>
  <div>2</div>
  <div>3</div>
  <div>4</div>
  <div>5</div>
  <div>6</div>


    

as you can see, when you hover the element on the top the element behind is activated. For more info about this property: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/CSS/pointer-events


Also, something that people may find useful is that you can re-enable pointer events on child elements of the pointer-events:none element by setting them to pointer-events:auto explicitly. This doesn't seem to be well documented and turns out to be very useful. – slicedtoad

@slicedtoad's comment was hugely useful for me, so I think it deserves a full answer. If you set pointer-events: none to a parent, you'll disable the events for it's children. HOWEVER, if you set point-events: auto to the children, they will work again.

This also works when the children have a negative z-index, and therefore become unresponsive to pointer-events.

Tags:

Html

Css