This is a tiny JavaScript package that creates custom cursor for you with minimal JavaScript and allows you to write hover effects for the cursor(s) in CSS.
- πͺΆ Lightweight (< 1kb minified)
- π¨ Fully customizable with CSS
- β‘ Simple API with minimal configuration
- π Multiple cursor support for follow-along effects
- π― Target specific elements for custom hover states
- π± Works with mouse and touch devices
Perfect for creative websites, portfolios, and interactive experiences where you want to replace the default cursor with something more engaging.
For this package to work with a CDN, you'll need to access the Cursor
class
from the window
object.
<script
defer
src="https://unpkg.com/custom-cursor@latest/dist/cdn.min.js"
></script>
<script>
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => {
new window['Cursor']({})
})
</script>
When using the CDN version, you still have full access to all configuration options:
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => {
new window['Cursor']({
count: 3, // Creates multiple cursor elements
targets: ['a', 'button', '.interactive'], // Elements that trigger hover states
})
})
These options work exactly the same way as in the package version, giving you complete control over your custom cursor behavior.
yarn add -D custom-cursor
npm install -D custom-cursor
import Cursor from 'custom-cursor'
new Cursor({})
The Cursor
constructor accepts an optional configuration object with two
parameters:
new Cursor({
count: 5, // Creates multiple cursor elements
targets: ['a', '.title', '#header'], // Elements that trigger hover states
})
Both parameters are optional and can be customized to fit your specific requirements.
This parameter lets you specify the number of cursor elements to create, which is ideal for creating trailing cursor effects.
When you set count: 5
, the package generates the following HTML structure:
<div data-cursor="0" style="..."></div>
<div data-cursor="1" style="..."></div>
<div data-cursor="2" style="..."></div>
<div data-cursor="3" style="..."></div>
<div data-cursor="4" style="..."></div>
Each cursor element receives a data-cursor
attribute with its index number,
allowing you to style each cursor element individually with CSS:
[data-cursor] {
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
}
[data-cursor='0'] {
background: #00f;
}
[data-cursor='1'] {
background: #eee;
}
This approach gives you complete control over the appearance of each cursor in the sequence, creating trailing effects, size variations, or color gradients.
The targets
parameter lets you define specific HTML elements that will trigger
cursor hover effects.
For example, with targets: ['a', '.title', '#header']
, the package will:
- Locate all
<a>
elements, elements with the class.title
, and the element with ID#header
- Add event listeners for
mouseover
andmouseleave
on these elements - When the mouse hovers over a target, add a class of
cursor-hover--<target>
to the document body
The <target>
portion of the class name corresponds to the identifier in your
targets array. For instance, hovering over .title
elements will add
cursor-hover--title
to the body.
You can style cursor hover states using the added class names. For example:
/* Style all cursors when hovering over links */
.cursor-hover--a [data-cursor] {
}
/* Style all cursors when hovering over elements with .title class */
.cursor-hover--title [data-cursor] {
}
/* Style all cursors when hovering over element with #header ID */
.cursor-hover--header [data-cursor] {
}
/* Style specific cursors by index during hover */
.cursor-hover--header [data-cursor='0'] {
}
.cursor-hover--header [data-cursor='1'] {
}
This approach gives you fine-grained control over cursor appearance during different hover interactions.