Git Product home page Git Product logo

isinviewport's Introduction

isInViewport.js

Build Status

An ultra-light jQuery plugin that tells you if the element is in the viewport, but with a twist. Did you say demo (inclusive of tests & code coverage)?

NOTE: The demo is now back up!

Installation

  • Get the release that you want from releases/tags ( or bower install isInViewport or npm install is-in-viewport)
  • Copy either isInViewport.js or isInViewport.min.js from the lib folder to your folder containing your scripts
  • Add it after you include jQuery
  • You're ready to go!

Usage

#### Basic usage
$( 'selector:in-viewport' )

When used as a selector it returns all the elements that match. Since it returns the element(s) it can thus be chained with other jQuery methods. It can also be used with jquery's .is.

$( 'div:in-viewport' ).css( 'background-color', 'red' );
// same as
var $div = $( 'div' );
if ( $div.is( ':in-viewport' ) ) {
  $div.css( 'background-color', 'red' );
}

Both of the above will set the background-color as red for all divs that are in the viewport.

Advanced usage

Using in-viewport pseudo-selector
$( 'selector:in-viewport( tolerance[, viewport selector] )' )

This returns all the elements that are in the viewport while taking into account the tolerance criterion.

Since it returns the element(s) it can thus be chained with other jQuery methods.

When a viewport selector is specified, it uses that to calculate if the element is in that viewport or not.

When a viewport selector is not specified, it defaults to window as the viewport.

The viewport selector is any valid jQuery selector.

Defaults:
  • tolerance defaults to 0
  • viewport defaults to window
Example:
//example 1
//the height of tolerance region is 100px from top of viewport
$( 'div:in-viewport( 100 )' ).css( 'background-color', 'red' );

//example 2
//the height of tolerance region is (viewport.height - 100px) from top of viewport
$( 'div:in-viewport( -100 )' ).css( 'background-color', 'green' );

//example 3
$('#viewport > div.box:in-viewport( 100, #viewport )').css( 'background-color', 'blue' )
                                                      .text( 'in viewport' );

Example 1 will set the background-color as red for all divs that are in the viewport with a tolerance of 100px.

Example 2 will set the background-color as green for all divs that are in the viewport with a tolerance of viewport height - 100px. This lets the user conveniently provide a tolerance value closer to the viewport height without having to call $(viewport).height() all the time.

Example 3 will set the background-color as blue and text as in viewport for all divs that are in the custom viewport given by #viewport and with a tolerance of 100px.

With the advanced usage it becomes very easy to build things like menus with items that get auto-highlighted based on which section you are on, transition effects when an element comes into the viewport, etc.

See the examples in the examples directory for more clarity.

Note:
  • When tolerance is 0 or undefined it is actually equal to tolerance: $(viewport).height() and not 0.

This makes it easier for developers to have the whole viewport available to them as a valid viewport.

Using exposed isInViewport function
$( 'selector' ).isInViewport({ tolerance: tolerance, viewport: viewport })

This returns all the elements that are in the viewport while taking into account the tolerance criterion.

Since it returns the element(s) it can thus be chained with other jQuery methods.

When a viewport is specified, it uses that to calculate if the element is in that viewport or not.

When a viewport is not specified, it defaults to window as the viewport.

The viewport is a valid DOM element or jQuery wrapped DOM element, NOT a selector string.

Defaults:
  • tolerance defaults to 0
  • viewport defaults to window
Example:
//example 1
//the height of tolerance region is 100px from top of viewport
$( 'div' ).isInViewport({ tolerance: 100 }).css( 'background-color', 'red' );

//example 2
//the height of tolerance region is (viewport.height - 100px) from top of viewport
$( 'div' ).isInViewport({ tolerance: -100 }).css( 'background-color', 'green' );

//example 3
var $viewport = $('#viewport');

$viewport
  .find('div.box')
  .isInViewport({ tolerance: 100, viewport: $viewport })
  .css( 'background-color', 'blue' )
  .text( 'in viewport' );

Support

Chrome, Firefox 3.0+, IE6+, Safari 4.0+, Opera 10.0+

Note

  • :in-viewport selector does support chaining.
  • To use with IE < 9 use jQuery <= 1.7.0

Changelog

2.3.0

  • Re-exposed isInViewport with saner semantics. You can now pass options as JS objects to isInViewport and hence can now do things like:
    var $viewport = $(<viewport selector>);
    
    $viewport
      .find(<selector for elements>)
      .isInViewport({ tolerance: 100, viewport: $viewport }) // <- passing the viewport jQuery object in directly
      .css(color: 'red');
  • Deprecated do in favour of run
  • When available, isInViewport now uses Sizzle.selectors.createPseudo

2.2.5

  • Updated readme to point to new demo. Mostly a bump for npm to pickup the new readme.

2.2.4

  • Pulled #15(fixes horizontal viewport check)

2.2.3

  • Allow use as CommonJS -> #19
  • Fixed gruntfile. It now generates proper filenames during build.

2.2.2

  • Published to npm
  • Updated install instructions to include npm

2.2.1

  • Pulled in a few bugfixes
  • Fixed ie8 bugs

2.2.0

  • Aliased the .do method with .run since do is a reserved word and errors out when used as a property in IE. To be on the safer side, use .run to chain any arbitrary function or an array of functions.

2.1.0

  • Added a .do method that lets the user chain any arbitrary function or an array of functions. Example:
//usage 1: pass a function
$( 'div:in-viewport' )
  .do(function(){
    console.log( this ); //will log the current jQuery element object it's being called on
  })
  .css( 'background-color', 'red' );

//usage 2: pass an array of functions
var fnArray = [
                function(){ console.log("Fn 1: %o", this); },
                function(){ console.log("Fn 2: %o", this); }
                //or say another function that maybe adds
                //elements to be tracked when in viewport
              ];
$( 'div:in-viewport' ).do(fnArray);

2.0.0

  • Added support for negative tolerance values that are now relative to the viewport height
  • Added support for custom viewport selector (see Advanced usage)
  • Added support for checking if an element is in viewport both horizontally and vertically. (checks both now)
  • Removed support for the old usage syntax in favour of the :in-viewport selector i.e.,
//removed
$( selector ).isInViewport( {"tolerance" :100, "debug": true} )

//current usage
$( 'selector:in-viewport( 100 )' )
  • Removed the debug option because, lets be honest, no one really used it.
  • Removed the weird code that handled end of page condition in the core. It's the user's prerogative to do what he/she wants when their page is scrolled to end of page.

1.1.1

  • Added bower support.

1.1.0

  • Added support for :in-viewport selector as per joeframbach's suggestion.

isinviewport's People

Contributors

zeusdeux avatar joscha avatar westie avatar bashmish avatar npafundi avatar omidgharib avatar ninze avatar

Watchers

Shakti Kumar avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.