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Du siehst gerade eine vereinfachte Darstellung unserer Inhalte. Normale Ansicht mit richtiger Formatierung.
    ich habe für eine responsive Navigation folgenden Code verwendet: <a href="https://codepen.io/bradfrost/pen/sHvaz">https://codepen.io/bradfrost/pen/sHvaz</a> Den Code habe ich für eine Onepage verwendet. Das heißt meine Navigationspunkte sind Anker auf der Website. Wenn ich jetzt darauf Klicke bleibt die mobile Navigation offen und stört. Wäre super, wenn sie sich wenn ich eins der li Elemente anklicke wieder schließt. Ich weiß nur leider nicht was ich beim Js ändern muss, damit das so funktioniert.

    Code

                                        
                                    <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.4.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
    <style>
      a.menu-link {
      	    float: right;
    		    display: block;
    		    padding: 1em;
    		}
    		nav[role=navigation] {
    			clear: both;
    			-webkit-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;  
    			-moz-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
    			-ms-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
    			-o-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
    			transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
    		}
    		.js nav[role=navigation] {
    			overflow: hidden;
    			max-height: 0;
    		}
    		nav[role=navigation].active {
    			max-height: 15em;
    		}
    		nav[role=navigation] ul {
    			margin: 0;
    			padding: 0;
    			border-top: 1px solid #808080;
    		}
    		nav[role=navigation] li a {
    			display: block;
    			padding: 0.8em;
    			border-bottom: 1px solid #808080;
    		}
    		
    		@media screen and (min-width: 48.25em) {
    			a.menu-link {
    			   display: none;
    			}
    			.js nav[role=navigation] {
    				max-height: none;
    			}
    			nav[role=navigation] ul {
    				margin: 0 0 0 -0.25em;
    				border: 0;
    			}
    			
    			nav[role=navigation]  li {
    				display: inline-block;
    				margin: 0 0.25em;
    			}
    			nav[role=navigation] li a {
    				border: 0;
    			}
    		}
    </style>
      <div id="pattern" class="pattern">
        <!--Begin Pattern HTML-->
    		<a href="#menu" class="menu-link">Menu</a>
    		<nav id="menu" role="navigation">
    			<ul>
    				<li><a href="#">Home</a></li>
    				<li><a href="#">About</a></li>
    				<li><a href="#">Products</a></li>
    				<li><a href="#">Services</a></li>
    				<li><a href="#">Contact</a></li>
    			</ul>
    		</nav>
    	</div>
    	<!--End Pattern HTML-->
    	
    	<div class="container">	
    		<section class="pattern-description">
    			<h1>Toggle Navigation</h1>
          <p>From <a href="http://bradfrostweb.com/blog/web/responsive-nav-patterns/">Responsive Navigation Patterns</a>:</p>
    			<p>For small screens a &#8220;menu&#8221; button appears that, when clicked, expands an accordion style navigation. When more screen real estate becomes available</p>
    			<h3>Pros</h3>
    			<ul>
    			<li><strong>Keeps the user in place</strong>- Where the footer anchor jumps suddenly, the toggle menu simply appears in place, which doesn&#8217;t disorient the user.</li>
    			<li><strong>Elegant</strong>- This is definitely one of the more classy approaches. No awkward forms or page jumps, just a smooth animated flyout or basic show/hide.</li>
    			<li><strong>Easy to scale up</strong>- All you need to do is hide the mobile trigger and show the nav list when the appropriate breakpoint is reached and you have yourself a normal large screen nav. All this can be accomplished with CSS.</li>
    			</ul>
    			<h3>Cons</h3>
    			<ul>
    			<li><strong>Animation performance</strong>- Your mileage will vary when doing any sort of animation on mobile devices. Android is notoriously bad with CSS animations and so things might not be as smooth as you&#8217;d like. Also, for what it&#8217;s worth I&#8217;ve recently been animating <a href="http://jsfiddle.net/leaverou/zwvNY/">max-height</a> which seems to work well.</li>
    			<li><strong>Javascript dependency</strong>- Again this approach relies on a bit of Javascript in order to trigger the toggle, but it&#8217;s minimal. I have one Blackberry test device that refuses to listen to any of this stuff, but most browsers, including proxy browsers like Opera Mini and Dolphin Mini, handle it just fine.</li>
    			</ul>
    			<h3>In the Wild</h3>
    			<ul>
    			<li><a href="http://www.starbucks.com/">Starbucks</a></li>
    			<li><a href="http://mobilewebbestpractices.com">Mobile Web Best Practices</a></li>
    			<li><a href="https://twitter.github.com/bootstrap/">Twitter Bootstrap</a></li>
    			</ul>
    			<h3>Resources</h3>
    			<ul>
    			<li><a href="http://jasonweaver.name/lab/flexiblenavigation/">FlexNav</a>
    			<li><a href="https://filamentgroup.com/lab/responsive_design_approach_for_navigation/">A Responsive Design Approach for Navigation, Part 1</a> by <a href="https://twitter.com/filamentgroup">@filamentgroup</a></li>
    			</ul>
    		</section>
    		<footer role="contentinfo">   
    			<div>
    				<nav id="menu">
    					<a href="https://bradfrost.github.com/this-is-responsive/patterns.html">&larr;More Responsive Patterns</a>
    				</nav>
    			</div>
    		</footer>
    	</div>
    <script>
      $(document).ready(function() {
      $('body').addClass('js');
      var $menu = $('#menu'),
        $menulink = $('.menu-link');
      
    $menulink.click(function() {
      $menulink.toggleClass('active');
      $menu.toggleClass('active');
      return false;
    })
      $('#menu li').click(function(){
        $menu.toggleClass('active');
    })
    });
    </script>