I'm looking for a javascript function that calculates a snap to grid value using a uniformly spaced grid.

Now I have the following code, which works fine as a basic solution, but now I need it to snap only when within say 2px of the snap position e.g. using a 30px spaced grid and a 2px limit, it would snap between 0px and 2px, 28px and 32px, 58px and 62px, etc.

snapToGrip = function(val,gridSize){
    return gridSize * Math.round(val/gridSize);
};

Many thanks

link|improve this question

75% accept rate
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Have you consider using jquery UI? The draggable utility allows snapping.

If you really need to implement it, this returns null when you shouldn't snap.

snapToGrip = function(val,gridSize){
    var snap_candidate = gridSize * Math.floor(val/gridSize);
    if (val-snap_candidate < 2) {
        return snap_candidate;
    }
    else {
        return null;
    }
};

To snap on both side :

snapToGrip = function(val,gridSize){
    var snap_candidate = gridSize * Math.round(val/gridSize);
    if (Math.abs(val-snap_candidate) < 2) {
        return snap_candidate;
    }
    else {
        return null;
    }
};
link|improve this answer
Yes, I considered it, but I'm building a bespoke application that doesn't justify using such a library. – Steve Jul 6 '11 at 8:26
@Steve Ok... I added some code. – poulejapon Jul 6 '11 at 8:34
Thanks, appreciate it. I've implemented the code, which works fine when moving an object from right to left (snap point) but not when dragging from left to right (snap point). – Steve Jul 6 '11 at 8:42
@Steve I don't understand... You said you wanted to snap between 0px and 2px. So you want to do so between -2px and 2px? – poulejapon Jul 6 '11 at 8:43
Sorry for the confusion. Nothing can be dragged beyond the grid - objects are constrained so that they can't be dropped at anything less than 0px. – Steve Jul 6 '11 at 8:49
show 2 more comments
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.