61

I'm quite new to jquery and can't seem to figure out why my code isn't working. I have a horizontal layout and want to use the scrollLeft() function (which works perfect with this code)

$("#next").click(function() {
    currentElement = currentElement.next();
    scrollTo(currentElement);    
});

function scrollTo(element) {
    $(window).scrollLeft(element.position().left);
}

But ideally, I would like to animate this so that when #next is clicked there is a nice animated effect to the scroll left function

$("#next").click(function() {
    currentElement = currentElement.next();
    scrollTo(currentElement);    
});

function scrollTo(element) {
    $(window).animate({scrollLeft: element.position().left}, 750);
}

But to no avail. What am I doing wrong?

2
  • 2
    scrollLeft() is a jQuery function, which only works on DOM elements. animate() can only work on DOM style attributes, not functions. Jul 29, 2011 at 15:02
  • In my situation, I found that some fixed elements cover the both site of ul , and that mistake me the ul is overflow( In fact the ul is not overflow). So I scrollLeft for so many times , and it didn't work. And the reason why is I mistook the ul is overflow which is not.
    – alan9uo
    Jan 29, 2019 at 2:39

2 Answers 2

88

You'll want something like this:


$("#next").click(function(){
      var currentElement = currentElement.next();
      $('html, body').animate({scrollLeft: $(currentElement).offset().left}, 800);
      return false;
   }); 
I believe this should work, it's adopted from a scrollTop function.

6
  • 1
    Nothing seems to happen. I think it's because you took out the scrollTo function which selects the next element. What I have is a huge ul with multiple li's and the horizontal theme has two buttons #previous and #next, which select the next or previous item in the ul and what I would like.. is to nicely animate that navigation. Here was my original question: stackoverflow.com/questions/6867914/jquery-jump-to-next-element Jul 29, 2011 at 15:11
  • In theory you should just be able to combine the two functions because you run the .click function but you're calling the other one within it. Maybe try $(window) instead of $('html, body').
    – ayyp
    Jul 29, 2011 at 15:18
  • Right, but what I was saying is I think (and I could very well be wrong) that you didn't include the scrollTo function in your above code, so it's not really a function in a function, even with $(window) Jul 29, 2011 at 15:22
  • 2
    The scrollTo function code becomes $('html, body').animate({scrollLeft: $(currentElement).offset().left}, 800);, to put your scrollTo code in exactly as is, it would be $(window).animate({scrollLeft: $(currentElement).position().left}, 750);. However, the other thing you might want to try is turning the element part in your scrollTo function code to $(element), and seeing if that works.
    – ayyp
    Jul 29, 2011 at 15:27
  • why are you returning false?
    – Thalatta
    Jan 17, 2015 at 0:57
47

First off I should point out that css animations would probably work best if you are doing this a lot but I ended getting the desired effect by wrapping .scrollLeft inside .animate

$('.swipeRight').click(function()
{

    $('.swipeBox').animate( { scrollLeft: '+=460' }, 1000);
});

$('.swipeLeft').click(function()
{
    $('.swipeBox').animate( { scrollLeft: '-=460' }, 1000);
});

The second parameter is speed, and you can also add a third parameter if you are using smooth scrolling of some sort.

2
  • 1
    What kind of css animation? Scroll left is not a css property
    – Luke
    Apr 4, 2019 at 16:42
  • Scroll to a specific position (ie. const left = 200;) like this: $(element).animate( { scrollLeft: left }, 1000);
    – yohosuff
    Jul 3, 2020 at 22:05

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