Watch one or more targets position for when they intersect a defined point in the viewport. Uses the Intersection Observer API
https://tflx.github.io/content-observer
- Supports vertical and horizontal scrolling
- Define a point in pixels or a percentage of the screen height/width
- Re-calculates on browser resize
- Update hash-location automatically - requires id on the target(s)
- Disconnect to stop watching targets
<script src="dist/main.js"></script>
ContentObserver
will be available in the global scope.
Or install via NPM/Yarn and require as a module
Install using Yarn:
yarn add content-observer
or NPM:
npm install content-observer --save
import ContentObserver from 'content-observer';
class App {
constructor() {
const co = new ContentObserver(document.querySelectorAll('.observe'), {
callback: this.handleCallback,
offset: 200, //or fx. '50%'
enableLocationHash: true,
direction: 'vertical'
});
}
handleCallback(target, inView) {
if (inView) document.querySelector('header').innerHTML = target.id.toUpperCase();
}
}
export default new App;
The constructor accepts two arguments: the targets (required) to watch and an options object.
To stop watching target(s):
co.disconnect()
Name | Type | Default | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
callback | function | null | false | The function called when targets intersect/leaves the offset |
offsett | number|string | 0 | false | The offset from top/left of viewport. A number indicates pixels from top/left of viewport. A string should be fx.: '50%' |
enableLocationHash | boolean | false | false | Update the location hash when a target with an id intersects the offset |
direction | string | 'vertical' | false | The scroll direction |
Name | Description |
---|---|
disconnect | Stop watching target(s) |
Intersection Observer is the API used to determine if an element intersects the offset or not. Browser support is really good - With Safari adding support in 12.1, all major browsers now support Intersection Observers natively. Add the polyfill, so it doesn't break on older versions of iOS and IE11.
You can import the polyfill directly or use a service like polyfill.io to add it when needed.
yarn add intersection-observer
Then import it in your app:
import 'intersection-observer'