I have currently got an element to scroll on page scroll and I am looking to get it to stop after around 750px as it currently overlaps the footer on smaller monitors.
I have found a couple of other examples which would require some restructuring of my code which I am trying to avoid, as the various other examples have to have certain divs relevant to eachother in order to stop the scrolling div at a certain point on the page.
My current script is as below and wrks great, only I am unsure as to edit this to stop the div at a certain point:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
var btn = $('.overview-wrap');
var btnPosTop = btn.offset().top;
var win = $(window);
win.scroll(function(e){
var scrollTop = win.scrollTop();
if(scrollTop >= btnPosTop){
btn.css({position:'fixed',top:0,marginTop:0});
}else if(btn.css('position') === 'fixed'){
btn.css({position:'',top:'',marginTop:'20px'});
}
});
});
</script>
Any pointers would be appreciated.
Personally, I hate dealing directly with the DOM for things like position, because it's so variable. Check out the jquery-position library for a nice abstraction on top of the dom.
Related
anyone have a clue how to make a sroll effect like this?
http://www.eurekasoft.com
I know the content is repeated at the end to create the illusion but i would like to know how to achieve the seemingly never end scroll.
Thanks!
It appears that site is using Skrollr: http://prinzhorn.github.io/skrollr/
Scroll all the way down for links to the Github and more examples.
Deep down, it is using the function window.scrollTo() to set the scroll position, and probably setting DOM around that area so that it looks the same as where it was scrolled from.
https://github.com/Prinzhorn/skrollr/blob/master/src/skrollr.js#L617
This works for me :)
here is the example: http://www.cancerbero.mx (only enable in Chrome and Safari)
// #loop is the div ID where repetition begins
$(document).ready(function(){
$(window).scroll(function(){
var scroll = $(window).scrollTop();
var limit = $('#loop').position().top;
if(scroll >= limit){
window.scrollTo(0,1); // 1 to avoid conflicts
}
if(scroll == 0){
window.scrollTo(0,limit);
}
});
});
Ok so the effect I am trying to emulate can be found on the nexus 5 site - http://www.google.com/nexus/5/ - when you scroll to the phone section. I've viewed source and looked through the code but there is over 13k lines of js so it was a waste.
Anyways what I did was add a class to fix the position of the images and created a background div that was like 5000px so it would appear to be fixed. The js fixed the position after the screen reached a certain point and then removed the fixed class after the end of the div.
My question is that i know this can be done better than my janky 'hack'. I'd love to hear your thoughts on better implementation.
This is part of the code that adds the fixed class
<script type="text/javascript">
$(window).scroll(function() {
var scroll = $(window).scrollTop();
if (scroll >= 500) {
$(".container").addClass("fixed");
}
if (scroll >= 8000) {
$(".container").removeClass("fixed");
}
});
Try this guide:
http://blog.teamtreehouse.com/multiplane-design-with-svgs-and-css-3d-transforms
Demo: http://codepen.io/nickpettit/full/eBCrK
Haven't done something like this before myself however. Also just a note that fixed position elements from my experience act up when viewed on tablet/smartphone.
I am trying to make the elements on my site fly-in and fly-out on scroll.
This is the effect I am looking for.
http://nizoapp.com/
The effect in the nizo site is done with jquery, I think
I have tried many different ways to get this effect working, with Skrollr, scrollorama, and jquery animate and with css transitions etc etc etc
I decided to use css transitions as mad by the "css animation cheat sheet" (google it)
After a lot of effort and some borrowed code, I have got it half working, as in, I can get the elements to fly-in on down scroll, but not to fly back out on up scroll.
This is a jsfiddle with it half working
http://jsfiddle.net/mrcharis/Hjx3Z/4/
The code is......
function isScrolledIntoView(elem) {
var docViewTop = $(window).scrollTop();
var docViewBottom = docViewTop + $(window).height();
var elemTop = $(elem).offset().top;
return ((elemTop <= docViewBottom) && (elemTop >= docViewTop));
}
$(window).scroll(function () {
$('.box').each(function (i) {
if (isScrolledIntoView(this)) {
$(this).addClass("slideRight");
}
});
});
// this is the function to check if is scroll down or up, but I cannot get it to trigger the fly in effect,
(function () {
var previousScroll = 0;
$(window).scroll(function () {
var currentScroll = $(this).scrollTop();
if (currentScroll > previousScroll){
// i figure to put the fly-in code here
}
else {
// and the fly-out code here
}
previousScroll = currentScroll;
});
}());
I have tried using another function (code chunk) to check if the scrolling is down or up, but i can't get it working with the existing code.
Any help to get this working would be awesome
Have a nice day
I will post the solution one day, if I can figure it out, sure someone else would like to know
The trick to knowing whether you're scrolling up or down is not to ask. Make it relational by using the top offset of the elements in question. Then it's as easy as > or <, for the most part.
Though if you do want to get the current direction you could always record the last scroll position and compare it with the current one.
var before = 0;
$(window).scroll(function(event){
var now = $(this).scrollTop();
if (now > before){
//on down code
} else {
//on up code
}
before = now;
});
Like the answer here suggests.
I like to trigger the events based on the screen size and the element position in the screen, so it doesn't matter whether it's up or down, it follows the same rules forwards and backwards. That way instead of asking up or down, it just asks if it's scrolling and executes it accordingly.
If you need me to make changes to my fiddle for you, just let me know what you want to happen. I only made the fiddle because of the horrible job they did on the tympanus.net example. You don't make a tutorial to accomplish a simple task 2 pages of js, that's unnecessary and it doesn't provide any instruction other than "hey, you want to do this? Then copy and paste these things I put together that have no clear course of action, and way too much code to digest quickly". Which doesn't help anyone learn.
After some code borrowing from tympanus.net and using the modernizer library I came up with this.
I tried different approaches as well but all of them turned out to have some flaws in them so I find best approach to be using the sample code and the already provided modernizer JS library.
Is there any way to know if an element is visible on an html page?
Like this:
One can probably do it considering the horizontal/vertical scrolling positions, the width/height of the browser window and the position/size of the element on the page, but I have little experience in jQuery so I don't know how to do it. And there might be a simple function one can call, I don't know.
You can use the .is(':visible') selectors to check if an element is currently visible in the DOM.
Edit:
However, as #BenM mentioned, this doesn't check if the elements on your page are actually out of your scrollable range - a great little plugin you could use in that case would be Viewport Selectors for jQuery.
Here is some code that I use to do this. It has been tested to work great.
function isVisible($obj) {
var top = $(window).scrollTop();
var bottom = top + $(window).height();
var objTop = $obj.offset().top;
var objBottom = objTop + $obj.height();
if(objTop < bottom && objBottom > top) {
//some part of $obj is visible on the screen.
//does not consider left/right, only vertical.
}
}
I'm been trying to get my head around issue and seem to cant find some help.
http://fiddle.jshell.net/DQgkE/7/show/
The experience is a bit jumpy and buggy now- but what i will like is
1) When you scroll down the page. I want the Sticky Nav to be (disable,dropped off, stop) at a specific location(chapter-3) on the page and the user should have the ability to keep scrolling down.
2) When the user is scrolling back up, the code will stick the nav back and carry it up until the nav reaches the original position at the top.
Below is a starting point.
3) Currently is kinda of doing that but there's some huge jump going on when scrolling back up
http://imakewebthings.com/jquery-waypoints/#doc-disable
using disable, destroy, enable option will be nice.
This is a original experience cleaned: http://fiddle.jshell.net/DQgkE/1/show/
Thanks for the help in Advance.
I'm not sure how this plugin you used work, but I have a solution I wrote a while back that I wrote in jquery. It has few variables at the top, the item you wanted sticky, the item where you want it to stop, and the class to add when it becomes sticky and padding at the top and bottom. I only modified the javascript portion in this fork.
EDIT
I went ahead and fixed the original code. Solution without waypoint plugin is in comments.
Here is the result:
http://fiddle.jshell.net/Taks7/show/
I would recommend to use jQuery (that was a surprise, right?! :P)
$(document).ready(function() { //when document is ready
var topDist = $("nav").position(); //save the position of your navbar !Don't create that variable inside the scroll function!
$(document).scroll(function () { //every time users scrolls the page
var scroll = $(this).scrollTop(); //get the distance of the current scroll from the top of the window
if (scroll > topDist.top - *distance_nav_from_top*) { //user goes to the trigger position
$('nav').css({position:"fixed", width: "100%", top:"*distance_nav_from_top*"}); //set the effect
} else { //window is on top position, reaches trigger position from bottom-to-top scrolling
$('nav').css({position:"static", width:"initial", top:"initial"}); //set them with the values you used before scrolling
}
});
});
I really hope I helped!