I've been trying to create my own custom scroll bar implementation in JavaScript. It must emulate the look and behavior of MS Office 2007 I checked many solutions out there, but nothing satisfies my needs. My main problem is this: How to calculate a balance between the scroll bar height and the number of lines it will move the target page when itself dragged a pixel? In other words, a balance between the scroll bar precision and the space available to drag it up and down. Is there a ready algorithm for that to reuse? I searched the net but found nothing, quite strange for what must be a common coding problem?
Thanks!
this is how to calculate the top position of your scrollbar
scrollbar.style.top = element.scrollTop / (element.scrollHeight / element.style.height)
you can use this onscroll of your scroll element. vice versa, this works in the other direction, when you drag your scrollbar.
sorry for this quick'n'dirty answer, will provide more information later if you liked to.
Related
See this page:
http://manos.malihu.gr/repository/custom-scrollbar/demo/examples/scrollbar_themes_demo.html
Try and scroll to 10,20 or 30% position using the mouse-wheel. It is not possible. It seems to jump to 33%, 66% and 100% as if they are anchors. That makes sense on a large page if you want to scroll quickly through the page.
But the page I am using it for I need more control, I need it to be able to easily scroll to specific points. Is that possible to do that where I can use the mousewheel to scroll more specifically to say 8,22,47%. Of course, it might not be possible to scroll to those exact points but it should be easy enough to scroll and slightly adjust with the mouse-wheel to get to that point you want.
Is that basically what smooth scroll is and if so do I just turn it off or do i need a jquery script to able to do this on my website or can you adjust your current script to change the anchors so instead of jumping 10% it only jumps 2% which would likely give more control.
On this particular page there wouldn't be a ton of scrolling needed but you do want to be able to stop it at specific points otherwise one tile is half cut off and then you have to use your mouse on the scrollbar to move it to a specific point where its not cut off.
I did not really know what was the best solution at the time but the problem was that I had a view like Trello with cards and when I used the mouse scroll often it would stop with half the card cut off, the only way to see the full card was to stop the mouse wheel scroll and manual use the scrollbar to pull it to an exact position.
As it turns out there was a perfect solution. http://manos.malihu.gr/repository/custom-scrollbar/demo/examples/complete_examples.html
See the last solution, snap scrolling to images, I used that but snapped to the top of the card so for each mouse scroll it moves to show a new card which is the perfect solution for me and hopefully will solve other users with similar layouts.
The initial link I posted did not have this solution even though it was the same code repo, I stumbled across the solution later but I accept I probably did not explain my question very well initially
I will try to be as short as possible.
I'm trying to make a scrolling pattern as NY Times website have on single articles: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/27/world/europe/british-parliament-vote-isis-airstrikes.html for example.
When you go down in the article, only the top bar remain sticky. Then, after you go down enough, and scroll up fast, the recommended articles bar appear:
But, the fun part is that the bar doesn't appear if you scroll up slow.
So, I was thinking of using the jQuery Waypoints plugin, which can tell me the direction of scrolling, but this way, anytime I scroll up, the recommended news bar will appear and I don't need this.
I don't know exactly how to do the mathematical function which will tell me that the up scroll was fast enough to show the bar.
Any ideas?
Just store the last $(window).height() position when you scroll, and in the next scroll event compare the old with the new, if it's bigger than an determined threshold then you show the bar.
I want to guide an image through a path. The scroll down of browser should bring the image down the path, and the scroll up of browser should make the image to trace back its path.
Here is an example of what I would like to acheive:
I want to guide that bug down the path as the user scrolls down through the article on the page and make it retrace its path when the user scrolls up (The bug's head will always be in the direction of motion).
How can I achieve this using jQuery and javascript?
You'll need to calculate the path you intend to use, and then bind a function to the scroll event that moves the image based on the distance scrolled, something like :
$(window).on('scroll', function(e) {
var S = $(this).scrollTop(), // scrolled distance
T = 10 + (S/24), // value for Top
L = 10 + Math.abs(Math.sin(S/400)*50); // value for Left
$("img").css({top: T+'%', left: L+'%'}); //set CSS
});
FIDDLE
I don't believe you can directly capture the mouses scroll with javascript or jquery alone. As that works with whats part of the browser, and inside the "window". You can however capture a scroll event. Based on the windows height/width. It takes a little calculation via javascript to build a reliable/stable equation that will work on all browsers in all resolutions. I'm not going to go into details here more so due to the fact that your question is rather vague and doesn't supply a problem to be solved more than it sounds like a demand for an answer.
But the essence of what you may want to do is, get the width/height of the window/body. And through some trickery of smoke and mirrors or in this case HTML and CSS and properly laying out a bunch of layers on top of one another create a page thats a mile long, with a hidden scroll bar, that you have 2 layers on top of one acting as your "path" and the other your image.. Of which when scrolled from point a to point b is tracked via the scrolling event of the page being a mile long under it all. And then use that couples with the width/height found to make adjustments so it doesnt run off screen at any given point (less thats what you want).
I have been trying to understand how they did those effects in http://artofflightmovie.com/ with no success so far. I am not even sure what to google for for help. Could any one ellaborate on it and perhaps put links to plugins\tutorials\other websites doing the same thing?
There is already a similar question, but it didn't help me a bit ^^
Custom scroll bar behavior in Javascript?
All of the answers here so far are spot on and cover various pieces of the execution. Joseph's post about how we 'contained' and 'maneuvered' the site are dead-on, and those mentioning jQuery accurately depict our heavy reliance on it :)
With that said, the other concept of moving along a non-linear path was probably the most difficult part. We literally used an Illustrator file that was setup like a piece of graph paper and drew a bezier path that reflected the movement we wanted from the scrollbar. Then we 'downsampled' the path by converting the curved lines into a bunch of straight lines that represented the curve (similar to downsampling audio waveforms) to keep performance/speed high. We took those coordinates, gave them to our designer, and he created a gigantic design file and literally designed each content section at the designated 'stop' points. Next we mapped each coordinate along the path to a percentage value of the scroll position. We stored these values in a JavaScript array. Lastly we wrote some JS functions that we pipe the scroll position through to determine how to offset the positioning of the site 'container'. (It basically 'tweens' between each coordinate allowing us very fine/precise values at any given scroll percentage) The scroll functionality is handled by a tall div that basically sets our document height to force a scrollbar, and we just read it's position during a Scroll Event and slide the container around to where it should be using the above mentioned functions.
The parallax effect is achieved by applying a percentage of the position offset (what we use to move the container around) and applying it to the sub-containers of the various content sections. This makes the subcontainers move slower or faster than the background, but on the same motion path.
Lastly, the little snowboarders and helicopters (which have CSS3 rotations in addition to x,y movement in some browsers!) are positioned by using a simliar array of 'start' and 'end' positions and tweening between them based on the scroll percentage.
I'll leave it at that to keep this from turning into a book, but I'd be happy to elaborate on specifics if you're interested.
Full disclosure: I was lead developer on the site. I'm not posting to 'toot my own horn' or anything like that, just to be helpful and provide assistance to a fellow tinkerer. I come here a lot to dig through and get insight from others. (many, many thanks to those who have helped us!) Also, shameless plug, but the film is breath-taking... go rent it if you haven't yet, you won't be sorry. :)
That's a pretty cool website ;)
Basically using some javascript you can detect how far a person has scrolled. Considering the amount of scrolling you can move the contents of your webpage around if their position is absolute.
There are a couple of jQuery plugins that allow you to do simular stuff although I'm not sure you can "scroll through" a sequence of coordinates.
Here are a couple of jQuery plugins that helps you get simular effects:
http://johnpolacek.github.com/scrolldeck.js/
http://johnpolacek.github.com/scrollorama/
http://demos.flesler.com/jquery/scrollTo
http://webdev.stephband.info/parallax.html
I just picked a couple I'm familiar with but there are many plugins that are alike.
edit:
Decided to add some more simular websites for your pleasure.
http://www.activatedrinks.com
http://www.beetle.de
http://www.nikebetterworld.com
the whole page is an "overlay" - a full width and height wrapper <div>. sort of how modal windows do their "full page shadow" effect and have a small div float inside. the whole page content is in that wrapper. the scroll path is a script. the script captures the body scroll and moves the contents of the div accordingly to the positions provided by the script. with a body long enough to be scrollable (which cannot be seen since the wrapper covers the whole page), it's as if you are scrolling sideways, upwards etc.
an analogy is a modal window. the wrapper is the full-page shade. the modal window is the content. and notice how modal windows stick to the middle? that's using a script to calculate it's position to stay in the middle by moving the modal window down, relative to the page's top. but in that website's case, they move in different directions.
It doesn't seem too complicated.
Using the .scroll(function() {}) in jQuery you listen for a scroll event. When triggered you set the position style (left, top) of the content div to give the appearance of moving sideways instead of down.
I guess you'll need overflow:none property on the div to prevent users from scrolling over the area you don't want them to see.
Sounds like a lot of effort for a clunky user interface in my opinion.
I would like to have a couple of divs that scroll in sync with each other in a manner similar to the diff tool, meld. Note: as this is a static image, when you move the slider, the corresponding slider moves in sync with the other slider. I need to do this both horizontally and vertically.
This is for a highly customized diff tool, some of the diffed lines are very long, and horizontal scrolling needs to happen. This is within a web page, I use jQuery, but any css/JavaScript approach would be appreciated.
It should be as easy as binding to the scroll event of each div and set the .scrollTop & .scrollLeft of the other div equal to scrolled div's scrollTop & scrollLeft.
See https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.scrollTop && https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.scrollLeft
Edit: Here is an example:
http://jsfiddle.net/dHvJJ/
I assume that you have a fixed font size. I also assume that the two containers are 2 divs.
here's my approach (in order to support webpage resizing properly):
convert the font-size from px to em
spit out an array of correspondences from the code (for example, you should already know that lines 32-33 from the first div correspond to line 22 in the second)
add event handlers for onscroll on both divs. Now the 'magic' is to calculate where the corresponding scrollbar should be, based on your info - it's pretty safe to assume that in order to scroll to line 32, you have to scroll 22 lines on the left side and so on.
For the horizontal scroll I don't think it should be anything hard, simply scroll the corresponding div at the same scrollLeft position