Simple Lava Lamp Menu Tutorial with jQuery

Written by Kevin Liew on 14 Aug 2009
100,968 Views • Tutorials

Introduction

Lava Lamp Menu is one of the favourite menu that has been using by some websites. It has a jQuery plugin for it, we're not reinventing the wheel, but it will be good to know how it works, how to customize it and make a unique one.

I've break it into different sections (html, css and javascript), in depth explanations with text, illustrations and two examples - a naked version and a styled version. Before we start you need jQuery easing for animated transition. and in that website, it has whole list of transition, and you can use any of them in this lava lamp menu tutorial! :)

  • make a rounded corner menu item for floating box.
  • A floating box following the menu item when you mouse over it
  • and the floating box should back to where it was when you mouse is out of the menu
  • elastic animated effect when the floating box moving around
  • floating box will stay in the menu item that you've clicked on it

Also, feel free to browse around my website, I have written huge amount of practical jQuery tutorials for frontend web design and development. :) Right, let's get it started.

1. HTML

In HTML section, I always want to keep it nice and clean, well, at least easy to understand. It's recommended to use UL list for menu. In this Lava menu tutorial, we will need some extra html elements after the list to make the floating bubble. Also, you need to set the default selected item, This is how the HTML looks like:

<div id="lava">

	<ul>
		<li><a href="#">home</a></li>
		<li><a href="#">lava lamp menu</a></li>
		<li><a href="#">queness.com</a></li>
		<li class="selected"><a href="#">jQuery</a></li>			
	</ul>

	<!-- If you want to make it even simpler, you can append these html using jQuery -->
	<div id="box"><div class="head"></div></div>

</div>

2. CSS

When you want to make some animation, position absolute and relative are the key thing. If we want to set the absolute position within a container, we need to make sure the parent item is set to position relative, otherwise, the children item will be positioned according to the window screen. Of course, z-index can only work if position absolute is defined. Now, please refer to the image below, it's basically the idea of lava lamp menu.

lava menu structure

For the floating #box, if you want to style it up with rounded corner, this is how to do it. You need to draw the box, make it long, and then slice it out, so you have two pieces of images, head and tail. Tail image is set as the background of #box and position it to right hand side of #box. And head image need to set it as the background for head class, and extra padding (width of the tail) to make sure the tail is not covered by the head image.

lava menu design structure

Lastly, *drumroll*, you just make a expandable rounded box. Why called it expandable? because the jQuery will resize the width of the head class so that it will fit to list item. You might want to further playing around with the CSS to tweak the #box. And you can adjust it in the following section of the CSS:

  • height, padding-right and margin-left in #box
  • height, and padding-left of the .head class
	body {
		font-family:georgia; 
		font-size:14px; 
	}
	a {
		text-decoration:none; 
		color:#333;
	}
	
	#lava {
		/* you must set it to relative, so that you can use absolute position for children elements */
		position:relative; 
		text-align:center; 
		width:583px; 
		height:40px;
	}
	
	#lava ul {
		/* remove the list style and spaces*/
		margin:0; 
		padding:0; 
		list-style:none; 
		display:inline;
				
		/* position absolute so that z-index can be defined */
		position:absolute; 
		
		/* center the menu, depend on the width of you menu*/
		left:110px; 
		top:0; 
		
		/* should be higher than #box */
		z-index:100;

	}
	
	#lava ul li {
		
		/* give some spaces between the list items */
		margin:0 15px; 
		
		/* display the list item in single row */
		float:left;
	}
	
	#lava #box {
		
		/* position absolute so that z-index can be defined and able to move this item using javascript */
		position:absolute; 
		left:0; 
		top:0; 
		
		/* should be lower than the list menu */
		z-index:50; 

		/* image of the right rounded corner */
		background:#ccc; 
		height:20px;
		
		/* add padding 8px so that the tail would appear */
		padding-right:8px;
		
		/* self-adjust negative margin to make sure the box display in the center of the item */
		margin-left:-10px;
	}
	
	#lava #box .head {
		/* image of the left rounded corner */
		background:#eee;
		height:20px;

		/* self-adjust left padding to make sure the box display in the center of the item */
		padding-left:10px;
	}

3. Javascript

As long as we have the CSS ready, jQuery will move the floating box to the correct position and react to the mouse events. To make it even easier to understand, I break it into two sections

This is what jQuery will do once the page is loaded:

  1. Once the javascript load, it search for the default selected item,
  2. and then, it grabs its position and its width and set it to the floating box

This is what jQuery will do with the mouse hover and mouseout event:

  1. It grabs the mouse hovered item's position and width,
  2. and then, set it to the floating box with the animate method and the animation transition with certain duration (you can change the duration)
  3. If the mouse out of the menu, it grabs the default selected item's positon and width, and move the floating box back to the original position
  4. And, if user clicked on the item, it will be the default selected item
	
	$(document).ready(function () {

		//transitions
		//for more transition, goto http://gsgd.co.uk/sandbox/jquery/easing/
		var style = 'easeOutElastic';
		
		//Retrieve the selected item position and width
		var default_left = Math.round($('#lava li.selected').offset().left - $('#lava').offset().left);
		var default_width = $('#lava li.selected').width();

		//Set the floating bar position and width
		$('#box').css({left: default_left});
		$('#box .head').css({width: default_width});

		//if mouseover the menu item
		$('#lava li').hover(function () {
			
			//Get the position and width of the menu item
			left = Math.round($(this).offset().left - $('#lava').offset().left);
			width = $(this).width(); 

			//Set the floating bar position, width and transition
			$('#box').stop(false, true).animate({left: left},{duration:1000, easing: style});	
			$('#box .head').stop(false, true).animate({width:width},{duration:1000, easing: style});	
		
		//if user click on the menu
		}).click(function () {
			
			//reset the selected item
			$('#lava li').removeClass('selected');	
			
			//select the current item
			$(this).addClass('selected');
	
		});
		
		//If the mouse leave the menu, reset the floating bar to the selected item
		$('#lava').mouseleave(function () {

			//Retrieve the selected item position and width
			default_left = Math.round($('#lava li.selected').offset().left - $('#lava').offset().left);
			default_width = $('#lava li.selected').width();
			
			//Set the floating bar position, width and transition
			$('#box').stop(false, true).animate({left: default_left},{duration:1500, easing: style});	
			$('#box .head').stop(false, true).animate({width:default_width},{duration:1500, easing: style});		
			
		});
		
	});

Update

2009-08-15: Wrong calculation for left value. Fixed. Credit to Carolyn who found the bug! :)

Conclusion

That's the lava lamp menu :) We've just reinvented the lava lamp! A version that you understand fully how it works, and modify it at your will. I hope you will also learn some analytic skills from this, and sooner or later you will able to create your own menu with unique effect. Who knows, I might reinvent your inventions one day. :)

Like this tutorials? You can express your gratitude by visiting my sponsors on the sidebar, buy me a drink in the bottom of the page or, just bookmark it and help me to spread this tutorial to the rest of the people who you think they are interested! :) Thanks!

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58 comments
FireDart 15 years ago
Very nice! Got a question thought.
How would I go about centering the
on the page? Which is located in a Div with a 100% width background-image?
Reply
FireDart 15 years ago
Never mine found a solution! Thanks for the script, it's really cool.
Reply
jim 15 years ago
really nice job!
Reply
Nykeri 15 years ago
really awesome didn't lava lamp was the name of that feature nice
Reply
Eric 15 years ago
Nice! Before i dive to far into the comment outs in the code, i have a need for a lava lamp, but just a single size graphic and there will be a logo centered on that graphic...so could i get away from slicing up an image into an end cap and make one uniform sized graphic to represent my "lava"
Reply
kevin Admin 15 years ago
hmm, i dont think u can do that :)... if you want single size image, it not longer called lava lamp. haha, however, you can achieve it by removing the line that resize .head class. remove the head class, and set the width and the background image in #box. that should work.
Reply
Typemanuel 15 years ago
Thanks so much for these great tutorials. One suggestion: you should include whether or not these tutorials are compatible with IE5.6.7. Mozilla or Safari, PC, MAC etc...
But otherwhise, CONGRATS.

www.typemanuel.com
Reply
Tom Hermans 15 years ago
This is a great tutorial, but there goes something wrong with the selected state. When I click a link, on the next page always the same item is selected again.. How can this be fixed.. ?
Reply
kevin Admin 15 years ago
Hi Tom, there is nothing wrong with the selected state. You will need to set it using cookie, or using server side language to put the selected class to the page u're currently in.
Reply
Hilary 15 years ago
This is awesome. But any idea why the floating bar wouldn't be reseting to the selected item when the mouse leaves my nav bar? My site is a custom wordpress theme. And I'm using images in my
for links instead of text.
Reply
kevin Admin 15 years ago
hi hilary, that's the concept of lava lamp menu, the lava return back to where it was. However, you can set the position of the lava thou, put in the selected class. It normally assign using server side language or cookie.

hmm, image instead of text. that could be the major problem, because the lava is displayed underneath the text, if it's images, it will completely hide it. Unless you set the transparency of the lava and make it appears on the top of those image, otherwise, it wouldn't work.
Reply
kevin Admin 15 years ago
Hi tom, yea, you definitely can do that. jQuery support can support multiple id in the selector:

$('.current_page_parent-class, .current_page_item-class')

not sure if it answered your question, but do let me know how it goes. cheers
Reply
Tom Hermans 15 years ago
I used the menu for a wordpress site and I use the .current_page_item-class to set the menu to the selected menu-item. However, if I'm on a subpage or I select a category Wordpress doesn't add a .current_page_item but a .current_page_parent-class. Is there a way to use more than one class that is the "selected" state ?

Cause now the menu behaves ok if on a regular page, but not when I'm reading a subpage ..

example (not finished site): www.geertpattyn.be/wordpress
Reply