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Philip Walton

The State of ES5 on the Web Dynamic LCP Priority: Learning from Past Visits Performant A/B Testing with Cloudflare Workers My Challenge to the Web Performance Community Smaller HTML Payloads with Service Workers Cascading Cache Invalidation Using Native JavaScript Modules in Production Today KV Storage: the Web's First Built-in Module Idle Until Urgent Page Lifecycle API First Input Delay Responsive Components: a Solution to the Container Queries Problem Why Web Developers Need to Care about Interactivity Deploying ES2015+ Code in Production Today How We Track Pageviews Is All Wrong The Google Analytics Setup I Use on Every Site I Build The Dark Side of Polyfilling CSS Loading Polyfills Only When Needed Untangling Deeply-Nested Promise Chains Learning How to Set Up Automated, Cross-browser JavaScript Unit Testing Houdini: Maybe the Most Exciting Development in CSS You've Never Heard Of Why I'm Excited About Native CSS Variables Do We Actually Need Specificity In CSS? How to Become a Great Front-End Engineer Extending Styles Side Effects in CSS Normalizing Cross-browser Flexbox Bugs Measuring Your Site's Responsive Breakpoint Usage Stop Copying Social Code Snippets Implementing Private and Protected Members in JavaScript How to Find Qualified Developers Interviewing as a Front-End Engineer in San Francisco Solved by Flexbox Decoupling Your HTML, CSS, and JavaScript Why I Test Private Functions In JavaScript How to Unit Test Private Functions in JavaScript Introducing HTML Inspector CSS: Everything is Global and How to Deal With It Dynamic Selectors Defending Presentational Class Names The Future of OOCSS: A Proposal What No One Told You About Z-Index CSS Architecture
The Dangers of Stopping Event Propagation
2014-05-20 · via Philip Walton

One of the most annoying bugs I’ve ever had deal with happened at my previous company. In one of our apps there was a “what’s new” button in the top left. When you clicked on the button it would display a dropdown of newly added features, and when you clicked anywhere else on the page the dropdown would go away—except it didn’t.

The problem ended up being caused by a single line of code in a third-party library that returned false from an event handler. This caused the event to stop propagating through the DOM, and as a result the handler that was listening for the event never ran.

The most frustrating thing about this bug was that it didn’t come from our code. It came from another library that the rest of our app depended on. So we couldn’t use it, and we couldn’t not use it. We were forced to write a messy, fragile work-around.

In this article on CSS-Tricks I explain why stopping event propagation is often a terrible idea that leads to unpredictable and unintended consequences. Events are global objects, and when you mess with them you mess with any code that’s depending on them.