This is what I did. Most tooltip scripts require you to execute a function that stores the tooltips. This is a jQuery example:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return $(this).css('text-overflow') == 'ellipsis';
}).each(function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title')) {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
}
})).done(function(){
setupTooltip();
});
If you didn't want to check for ellipsis css, you could simplify like:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title'));
}).each(function() {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
})).done(function(){
setupTooltip();
});
I have the "when" around it, so that the "setupTooltip" function doesn't execute until all titles have been updated. Replace the "setupTooltip", with your tooltip function and the * with the elements you want to check. * will go through them all if you leave it.
If you simply want to just update the title attributes with the browsers tooltip, you can simplify like:
$('*').filter(function() {
return $(this).css('text-overflow') == 'ellipsis';
}).each(function() {
if (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title')) {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
}
});
Or without check for ellipsis:
$.when($('*').filter(function() {
return (this.offsetWidth < this.scrollWidth && !$(this).attr('title'));
}).each(function() {
$(this).attr('title', $(this).text());
});