Awesome
NOTE FROM MAINTAINER:
This library is no more required nowadays, you can now rely on the Intersection Observer API which is available in all modern browsers: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Intersection_Observer_API
/NOTE FROM MAINTAINER
inViewport
Know when an element is in the window viewport or a custom viewport.
API
Immediate result
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
var isInViewport = inViewport(elem); // returns `true` or `false`
alert('myFancyDiv is ' + isInViewport ? 'visible' : 'not visible' + ' in the window');
Using a callback
We watch for your element to enters the viewport and call your callback when it does.
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
inViewport(elem, visible);
function visible(elt) {
// elt === elem
alert(elt.id + ' is visible in the window!');
}
The first callback argument is always the element
that entered the viewport.
Callback watcher API
The callback is called only one time, when the element
is in the viewport for the first time.
At any time you can rewatch or stop watching, by using the watch
and dispose
API.
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
var count = 0;
var timer;
var watcher = inViewport(elem, visible);
function visible() {
count++;
timer = setTimeout(watcher.watch, 1000);
}
setTimeout(function(){
watcher.dispose();
clearTimeout(timer);
alert('myfancyDiv was visible '+count+' seconds in the last 10 seconds!');
}, 10000);
A custom container
By default, we use the current window as the reference viewport. But you can also specify another element as a reference viewport.
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var customContainer = document.getElementById('myFancyContainer');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
inViewport(elem, { container: customContainer }, visible);
function visible() {
alert('myfancyDiv is visible in the `customContainer`!');
}
Specifying an offset
By default, when your element precisely enters the viewport, you get a callback.
But maybe you want to know when your element is soon-to-be-shown in the viewport?
Use the offset
param for that!
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
inViewport(elem, { offset: 300 }, visible);
function visible() {
alert('myfancyDiv is visible in the `customContainer`!');
}
When your element is near 300px
of the viewport, you get your callback / true result.
Specifying debounce value
Currently, scroll and resize events are called every 15ms, but there are situations where larger value like 300ms is more sensible, e.g. image lazyload, where you probably want to wait for user to stop with scrolling before loading every image that comes into viewport.
You can change that with debounce
param.
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
inViewport(elem, { debounce: 300 }, visible);
function visible() {
alert('myfancyDiv is visible in the `customContainer`!');
}
Failsafe check
By default, inViewport does a failsafe to handle display manipulation that does not throw an event. It works with a setInterval
performed every 150ms.
One of the situations where this is useful is when you have a hidden parent containing elements; when the parent becomes visible, we have no event that the children became visible. If you handle cases like this by yourself in different part of your codebase (e.g. you have callback which is active when parent becomse visible), you can turn it off with failsafe
param.
var inViewport = require('in-viewport');
var elem = document.getElementById('myFancyDiv');
inViewport(elem, { failsafe: false }, visible);
function visible() {
alert('myfancyDiv is visible in the `customContainer`!');
}
Dynamic element creation (document.createElement)
If you are creating elements dynamically, be sure to call inViewport
when the
element is in the DOM.
Otherwise it may fail on old browsers.
We check for newly visible elements on scroll
or resize
.
We use MutationObserver to listen for newly added DOM nodes that were previously registered with in-viewport.
MutationObserver is not compatible with old browsers.
That is why, if you need old browsers full compatibility, you should call in-viewport after inserting elements in the DOM.
Use cases
- Images, iframes, widgets lazyloader
- infinite scroll
- loading widgets only when needed
Quirksmode
Be sure to be in standards-compliant mode.
Quirks mode is not supported since most browsers will report invalid values for window viewport.
Developing
Launch the dev server:
npm run dev
Browse to http://localhost:8080/__zuul.
Building
We provide a pre-built version of in-viewport
in build/in-viewport.min.js
.
But you can build your own:
npm run build
You get the build in build/in-viewport.min.js
.
Please consider using browserify.
License
Copyright (c) 2013-2016 Vincent Voyer
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.