15

I have a document with several sections like this:

<div class='section' id='sec1'>
    lalala
    lalala
    lalala
</div>

<div class='section' id='sec2'>
    lalala
    lalala
    lalala
</div>

<div class='section' id='sec3'>
    lalala
    lalala
    lalala
</div>

<div class='section' id='sec4'>
    lalala
    lalala
    lalala
</div>

How do I grab the closest <div.section> to the current scroll position (presumably, this would equate to the section that the reader is currently looking at)?

3
  • Besides using hover you could take the scroll position and subtract the height of each '.section' from it till it is 0 or less. That will be increasingly difficult with the more you have wrapping these divs.
    – bygrace
    May 25, 2012 at 19:55
  • There is a fair amount wrapped around these divs, and a lot inside it (it's the HTML output from docbook) May 25, 2012 at 20:01
  • gizmovation gives a better approach below anyways
    – bygrace
    May 25, 2012 at 20:09

2 Answers 2

22

You can use $(window).scrollTop() and $(el).postion().top to figure out how far the element is from the top of the screen after scrolling.

You can then use this information to manipulate the element as desired.

Here is a working jsfiddle example: http://jsfiddle.net/gizmovation/x8FDU/

1
  • 1
    Hi guys, I was wondering if this could be achieved with plain JavaScript as well?
    – AppRoyale
    Sep 18, 2017 at 12:23
-5

Whenever you hover an element the mousemove event tells you which element you're hovering over.

$(document).bind('mousemove', function(e) {
    e.target
    /*
        the target in click/hover events
        is the element that the event was
        triggered on.
    */
});

One drawback may be the fact e.target will give you the element with the highest z-index -- the one in the top-most layer -- so if you have an overlay above your text it will give you the overlay not the text div.

2
  • Please add more clarification on your answer and explain why it works.
    – Hanna
    Jul 1, 2015 at 21:09
  • @johannes -- the explanation in the comment is pretty clear IMO. Whenever you hover an element the mousemove event tells you which element you're hovering over. Jul 2, 2015 at 5:26

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