Open the above sample in a touch-enabled device that supports pull-to-refresh on websites.
Pull the splitter bar down with your finger.
What is the expected result?
Users can use the splitter bar without accidentally triggering pull-to-refresh.
Any other information? (attach screenshot if possible)
While mobile devices can typically use ResponsiveSplitter, where splitter bars are not shown, this issue affects not only mobile but potentially all touch-enabled devices that support pull-to-refresh.
Hello @boghyon ,
Thank you for sharing this finding. I've created an internal incident DINC0281679. The status of the issue will be updated here in GitHub.
OpenUI5 version
Tested with 1.71, 1.84, 1.96, 1.108, 1.120, nightly
Browser/version (+device/version)
Tested on Android with Chrome and Firefox
URL (minimal example if possible)
https://output.jsbin.com/qozaqez
Steps to reproduce the problem:
What is the expected result?
Users can use the splitter bar without accidentally triggering pull-to-refresh.
Any other information? (attach screenshot if possible)
While mobile devices can typically use
ResponsiveSplitter
, where splitter bars are not shown, this issue affects not only mobile but potentially all touch-enabled devices that support pull-to-refresh.