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I have a link on a long HTML page. When I click it, I wish a DIV on another part of the page to be visible in the window by scrolling into view.

A bit like EnsureVisible in other languages.

I've checked out scrollTop and scrollTo but they seem like red herrings.

Can anyone help?

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10 Answers

vote up 6 vote down
<a href="#myAnchorALongWayDownThePage">Click here to scroll</a>

<A name='myAnchorALongWayDownThePage"></a>

No fancy scrolling but it should take you there.

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The question asked for javascript to accomplish the same thing. – Scott S. Sep 16 '08 at 0:21
Check Peter Boughton's answer in stackoverflow.com/questions/66964 - giving the div an id instead of using named anchors works the same, but has much better semantic meaning and requires less markup. – nickf Sep 16 '08 at 0:21
as scott s pointed out below: document.location.hash="myAnchor"; – Aaron Watters Oct 23 at 18:56
vote up 4 vote down

Answer posted here - same solution to your problem.

Edit: the JQuery answer is very nice if you want a smooth scroll - I hadn't seen that in action before.

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vote up 4 vote down

How about the JQuery ScrollTo - see this sample code

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vote up 2 vote down

Why not a named anchor?

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Heh... i started to post a JavaScript solution, and then read yours... and slapped myself. Nice job! :-) – Shog9 Sep 16 '08 at 0:21
vote up 1 vote down

The property you need is location.hash. For example:

location.hash = 'top'; //would jump to named anchor "top

I don't know how to do the nice scroll animation without the use of dojo or some toolkit like that, but if you just need it to jump to an anchor, location.hash should do it.

(tested on FF3 and Safari 3.1.2)

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vote up 1 vote down

The difficulty with scrolling is that you may not only need to scroll the page to show a div, but you may need to scroll inside scrollable divs on any number of levels as well.

The scrollTop property is a available on any DOM element, including the document body. By setting it, you can control how far down something is scrolled. You can also use clientHeight and scrollHeight properties to see how much scrolling is needed (scrolling is possible when clientHeight (viewport) is less than scrollHeight (the height of the content).

You can also use the offsetTop property to figure out where in the container an element is located.

To build a truly general purpose "scroll into view" routine from scratch, you would need to start at the node you want to expose, make sure it's in the visible portion of it's parent, then repeat the same for the parent, etc, all the way until you reach the top.

One step of this would look something like this (untested code, not checking edge cases):

function scrollIntoView(node) {
  var parent = node.parent;
  var parentCHeight = parent.clientHeight;
  var parentSHeight = parent.scrollHeight;
  if (parentSHeight > parentCHeight) {
    var nodeHeight = node.clientHeight;
    var nodeOffset = node.offsetTop;
    var scrollOffset = nodeOffset + (nodeHeight / 2) - (parentCHeight / 2);
    parent.scrollTop = scrollOffset;
  }
  if (parent.parent) {
    scrollIntoView(parent);
  }
}
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vote up 1 vote down

There is a jQuery plugin for the general case of scrolling to a DOM element, but if performance is an issue (and when is it not?), I would suggest doing it manually. This involves two steps:

  1. Finding the position of the element you are scrolling to.
  2. Scrolling to that position.

quirksmode gives a good explanation of the mechanism behind the former. Here's my preferred solution:

function absoluteOffset(elem) {
    return elem.offsetParent && elem.offsetTop + absoluteOffset(elem.offsetParent);
}

It uses casting from null to 0, which isn't proper etiquette in some circles, but I like it :) The second part uses window.scroll. So the rest of the solution is:

function scrollToElement(elem) {
    window.scroll(absoluteOffset(elem));
}

Voila!

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vote up 0 vote down

scrollTop (IIRC) is where in the document the top of the page is scrolled to. scrollTo scrolls the page so that the top of the page is where you specify.

What you need here is some Javascript manipulated styles. Say if you wanted the div off-screen and scroll in from the right you would set the left attribute of the div to the width of the page and then decrease it by a set amount every few seconds until it is where you want.

This should point you in the right direction.

Additional: I'm sorry, I thought you wanted a separate div to 'pop out' from somewhere (sort of like this site does sometimes), and not move the entire page to a section. Proper use of anchors would achieve that effect.

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vote up 0 vote down

If you don't want to add an extra extension the following code should work with jQuery.

$('a[href=#target]').
    click(function(){
        var target = $('a[name=target]');
        if (target.length)
        {
            var top = target.offset().top;
            $('html,body').animate({scrollTop: top}, 1000);
            return false;
        }
    });
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vote up 0 vote down

Correct me if I'm wrong but I'm reading the question again and again and still think that Angus McCoteup was asking how to set an element to be position: fixed.

Angus McCoteup, check out http://www.cssplay.co.uk/layouts/fixed.html - if you want your DIV to behave like a menu there, have a look at a CSS there

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