30

I am interested in setting up an HTML page with multiple video clips such that each video clip plays only while visible and then pauses when out of view.

I have found this great example of how this can be implemented with one clip, but I have been unable to modify the code to work with multiple clips. Perhaps I need to convert this code into a function for easy re-usability?

Here is what I have so far (JS Bin linked above modified for 2 clips instead of one).

This code seems to work for only one of the two clips.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <!--   Created using jsbin.com   Source can be edited via http://jsbin.com/ocupor/1/edit
    -->
    <head>
        <meta charset=utf-8 />
        <title>JS Bin</title>
        <style>
            #right {
                position: absolute;
                top: 2000px;
            }
            #video1 {
                position: absolute;
                left: 2000px;
                top: 2000px;
            }
            #video2 {
                position: absolute;
                left: 2000px;
                top: 3000px;
            }

        </style>

        <style id="jsbin-css">
        </style>
    </head>
    #
    <body style="width: 4000px; height: 4000px;">
        <div id="info"></div>
        <div id="down">
            scroll down please...
        </div>
        <div id="right">
            scroll right please...
        </div>
        <video id="video1">
            <source src="http://video-js.zencoder.com/oceans-clip.mp4"/>

        </video>
        <script>
            var video = document.getElementById('video1'), fraction = 0.8;

            function checkScroll() {
                var x = video.offsetLeft, y = video.offsetTop, w = video.offsetWidth, h = video.offsetHeight, r = x + w, //right
                b = y + h, //bottom
                visibleX, visibleY, visible;

                visibleX = Math.max(0, Math.min(w, window.pageXOffset + window.innerWidth - x, r - window.pageXOffset));
                visibleY = Math.max(0, Math.min(h, window.pageYOffset + window.innerHeight - y, b - window.pageYOffset));

                visible = visibleX * visibleY / (w * h);

                if (visible > fraction) {
                    video.play();
                } else {
                    video.pause();
                }
            }

            checkScroll();
            window.addEventListener('scroll', checkScroll, false);
            window.addEventListener('resize', checkScroll, false);
        </script>

        <video id="video2">
            <source src="http://video-js.zencoder.com/oceans-clip.mp4"/>

        </video>
        <script>
            var video = document.getElementById('video2'), fraction = 0.8;

            function checkScroll() {
                var x = video.offsetLeft, y = video.offsetTop, w = video.offsetWidth, h = video.offsetHeight, r = x + w, //right
                b = y + h, //bottom
                visibleX, visibleY, visible;

                visibleX = Math.max(0, Math.min(w, window.pageXOffset + window.innerWidth - x, r - window.pageXOffset));
                visibleY = Math.max(0, Math.min(h, window.pageYOffset + window.innerHeight - y, b - window.pageYOffset));

                visible = visibleX * visibleY / (w * h);

                if (visible > fraction) {
                    video.play();
                } else {
                    video.pause();
                }
            } checkScroll();
            window.addEventListener('scroll', checkScroll, false);
            window.addEventListener('resize', checkScroll, false);

        </script>

    </body>
</html>

14 Answers 14

28

Using the isInViewport plugin and jQuery, here's my code for the task

$('video').each(function(){
    if ($(this).is(":in-viewport")) {
        $(this)[0].play();
    } else {
        $(this)[0].pause();
    }
})
8
  • I'm trying to get this code to work for me, it is much simpler. I'm having trouble, though. Since I have switch over to a wordpress-based site, my videos follow the following example format: class="wp-video-shortcode" id="video-1115-1" Nov 28, 2014 at 18:28
  • Any way to modify the [0] to work with this is video-XXXX-X formatting? Nov 28, 2014 at 18:30
  • Can we apply to Vimeo stating that it run under iframe? How to?
    – wpcoder
    Feb 20, 2017 at 21:55
  • 3
    Downvoted because OP did not specify jQuery tag. It is expected, the question is for vanilla javascript. Jan 19, 2019 at 14:42
  • 4
    @KalleH.Väravas this was not the case in 2014 when this answer was posted and also, these esoteric rules only discourage contributions.
    – qwazix
    Dec 15, 2020 at 21:09
27

OK, I think, it must be something like this:

var videos = document.getElementsByTagName("video");

function checkScroll() {
    var fraction = 0.8; // Play when 80% of the player is visible.

    for(var i = 0; i < videos.length; i++) {

        var video = videos[i];

        var x = video.offsetLeft, y = video.offsetTop, w = video.offsetWidth, h = video.offsetHeight, r = x + w, //right
            b = y + h, //bottom
            visibleX, visibleY, visible;

            visibleX = Math.max(0, Math.min(w, window.pageXOffset + window.innerWidth - x, r - window.pageXOffset));
            visibleY = Math.max(0, Math.min(h, window.pageYOffset + window.innerHeight - y, b - window.pageYOffset));

            visible = visibleX * visibleY / (w * h);

            if (visible > fraction) {
                video.play();
            } else {
                video.pause();
            }

    }

}

window.addEventListener('scroll', checkScroll, false);
window.addEventListener('resize', checkScroll, false);
3
  • 3
    I was getting a "fraction not defined" ReferenceError, but works perfectly once I added back the definition: fraction = 0.8; Jan 16, 2014 at 15:57
  • Yep, fraction just needs to be defined somewhere- great answer though :) Apr 19, 2016 at 10:10
  • That does not work for me but is useful as a reference.
    – e-israel
    Aug 31, 2020 at 16:20
23

None of the above seemed to work for me, but I finally found a way: you'll need the visible plugin, and this little piece of code right here:

$(window).scroll(function() {
    $('video').each(function() {
        if ($(this).visible(true)) {
            $(this)[0].play();
        } else {
            $(this)[0].pause();
        }
    })
});

This will allow any video to play only when it gets into viewport. By replacing visible( true ) by visible() , you can set it to play only when the entire video DOM element is in viewport.

1
  • 1
    If you guys don't want to use a plugin, check this answer out.
    – John Doe
    Aug 8, 2021 at 19:06
9

Y'all need to get with the times and use IntersectionObserver (and the appropriate polyfill or babeifyl). This script will play/pause all videos on a page when they scroll in/out of view. Boom.

<script crossorigin="anonymous" src="https://polyfill.io/v3/polyfill.min.js?features=IntersectionObserver%2CIntersectionObserverEntry"></script> 
<script>
    let video = document.querySelector('video');
    let isPaused = false;
    let observer = new IntersectionObserver((entries, observer) => { 
        entries.forEach(entry => {
        if(entry.intersectionRatio!=1  && !video.paused){
            video.pause();
            isPaused = true;
        }
        else if(isPaused) {
            video.play(); 
            isPaused=false}
        });
    }, {threshold: 1});
    observer.observe(video);
</script>

source

4
  • 1
    kind of curious what the isPaused flag is doing. Is it some kind of performance flag, or is required for the effect to work? Aug 19, 2020 at 9:26
  • 1
    it looks like it should be stripped out. Aug 19, 2020 at 9:34
  • 1
    yes, could be as simple as if (entry.intersectionRatio !== 1) video.pause() else video.play() Aug 19, 2020 at 9:35
  • css-tricks.com/… - looking back, it's to know if the video was autopaused, Aug 19, 2020 at 9:49
7

Need to check if the video is visible during the scrolling.

 $(window).scroll(function() {
    $('video').each(function(){
        if ($(this).is(":in-viewport")) {
            $(this)[0].play();
        } else {
            $(this)[0].pause();
        }
    })
});
3

Using jQuery, isInViewport, and Coffeescript, the complete solution for me looked like this:

$(window).scroll ->
  $('video:in-viewport').each -> $(@)[0].play()
  $('video:not(:in-viewport)').each -> $(@)[0].pause()
2

Old question, but just wanted to add my two cents, I initially started with the jQuery code above, but ran into some issues with the implementation. This solution should work with multiple videos, and also prevents a problem where the user pauses a video and tries to scroll away and it just starts again:

<script>
    var videoList = [];
    var scrollPauseList = [];
    var clickedPauseList = [];
</script>
<script>    
    var myScrollFunc = function() {

        $(".video-js").each(function(){ 

            var inView = $(this).is(":in-viewport");
            var isPaused = $(this)[0].player.paused();
            var playerIdx = videoList.indexOf(this.id);
            var scrollPaused = scrollPauseList[playerIdx];
            var clickPaused = clickedPauseList[playerIdx];

            if (inView) {                       
                var hasEnded = $(this)[0].player.ended();
                var curTime = $(this)[0].player.currentTime();
                var hasStarted = curTime > 0;
                if(hasStarted && !hasEnded && !clickPaused)
                {
                    scrollPauseList[playerIdx] = false;
                    $(this)[0].player.play();
                }
            } else if(!isPaused) {                      
                scrollPauseList[playerIdx] = true;
                $(this)[0].player.pause();
            }
        });
    };      

    $(window).scroll(myScrollFunc);     
</script>   

<video  
  class="video-js" controls></video>

<script>
$(".video-js").each(function(){ 
        videoList[videoList.length] = this.id;
        scrollPauseList[scrollPauseList.length] = false;
        clickedPauseList[scrollPauseList.length] = false;
    }); 

for(var i = 0; i < videoList.length; i++)
{
    var playerID = videoList[i];
    var player = videojs(playerID);

    player.on('pause', function() {
        var pID = videoList.indexOf(this.id());

        if(!scrollPauseList[pID])
        {
            clickedPauseList[pID] = true;
            scrollPauseList[pID] = false;
        }
        else
        {
            clickedPauseList[pID] = false;
            scrollPauseList[pID] = false;
        }
    });
}       
</script>

I've scrubbed some stuff, and i'm using video-js, so you may need to modify it a bit to get your implementation to work.

2

Tried many solutions, the only one partially working is the one posted below. The problem is that having 3 videos on the page, the second one and the third one are basically controlled by the first one.

So they start playing when the page is loaded (while they are supposed to play when in viewport) and they get paused when the first get paused, any suggestion on having this working with multiple videos?

Tried using getElementById but didn't work, tried also jquery plugins but no good results.

Here you have the www page where you can see what happen and all source code of course.

http://185.197.128.183/~monompro/

window.onload = function() {

    var videos = document.getElementsByTagName("video"),
        fraction = 0.8;

    function checkScroll() {

        for (var i = 0; i < videos.length; i++) {

            var video = videos[i];

            var x = video.offsetLeft,
                y = video.offsetTop,
                w = video.offsetWidth,
                h = video.offsetHeight,
                r = x + w, //right
                b = y + h, //bottom
                visibleX, visibleY, visible;

            visibleX = Math.max(0, Math.min(w, window.pageXOffset + window.innerWidth - x, r - window.pageXOffset));
            visibleY = Math.max(0, Math.min(h, window.pageYOffset + window.innerHeight - y, b - window.pageYOffset));

            visible = visibleX * visibleY / (w * h);

            if (visible > fraction) {
                video.play();
            } else {
                video.pause();
            }

        }

    }

    window.addEventListener('scroll', checkScroll, false);
    window.addEventListener('resize', checkScroll, false);
}
2

As explained here, the offsetTop/offsetLeft/etc. approaches are slower and more error prone than the newer getBoundingClientRect approach. Here's some working code to play any videos that are even partially visible in the viewport:

function playVisibleVideos() {
  document.querySelectorAll("video").forEach(video => elementIsVisible(video) ? video.play() : video.pause());
}

function elementIsVisible(el) {
  let rect = el.getBoundingClientRect();
  return (rect.bottom >= 0 && rect.right >= 0 && rect.top <= (window.innerHeight || document.documentElement.clientHeight) && rect.left <= (window.innerWidth || document.documentElement.clientWidth));
}

let playVisibleVideosTimeout;
window.addEventListener("scroll", () => {
  clearTimeout(playVisibleVideosTimeout);
  playVisibleVideosTimeout = setTimeout(playVisibleVideos, 100);
}, {passive: true});

window.addEventListener("resize", playVisibleVideos);
window.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", playVisibleVideos);

The setTimeout stuff ensures that the playVisibleVideos() function isn't called any more often than once every 100ms as the user scrolls (so it doesn't cause lag). The {passive: true} ensures the scroll handler function doesn't "block" scrolling (which can cause scroll lag).

Note that it seems like @Tristanisginger's answer using the more modern IntersectionObserver approach may be a better choice than this one for most people.

1

This is how I managed to play a video only when the user scrolls to it. I used IsInViewport plugin. Hope you find it useful!

$(window).scroll(function() {

    var video = $('.yourvideo');

    $(video).each(function(){

        if(video.is(':in-viewport')){

            video[0].play();

            video.removeClass('yourvideo');
            //I removed class to stop repeating the action ".play()" when it is scrolled again.
        }
    });
});
1

In case anyone else runs into this question, I was unable to use Saike's solution on my WordPress site because of the way the videos were auto embedded (MediaElement player). However, qwazix's solution worked with some modification. Here is the jQuery code that works with the IsInView plugin. Here are my include scripts (placed at the end of footer.php in my theme folder).

<script src="//code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.0.min.js"></script>
<script src="js/isInViewport.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="js/scrollview.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

And the jQuery code (modify 400 to your tolerance liking)

  $(function() {
      $(window).scroll(function() {
          $('.wp-video-shortcode').each(function() {
              var str = $(this).attr('id');
              var arr = str.split('_');
              typecheck = arr[0];
              if ($(this).is(":in-viewport( 400 )") && typecheck == "mep") {
                  mejs.players[$(this).attr('id')].media.play();
              } else if (typecheck == "mep") {
                  mejs.players[$(this).attr('id')].media.pause();
              }
          });
      });
  });

Only issue I have with this code is that it does restart a video clip on scroll even if paused by the user. Wasn't a deal-breaking issue on my site. Here is the code in action: Ultrasoundoftheweek.com

1

If you're looking for a simple solution without any dependencies, here it is:

 let video = document.getElementById('video')

 function playVideoOnScroll () {
    const threshold = 300 //px above the video to start playing
    let offset = video.getBoundingClientRect().top
    if (offset < threshold) {
      demoVideo.play()
    } else {
      demoVideo.pause()
    }
  }

  window.addEventListener('scroll', playVideoOnScroll, false)
  window.addEventListener('resize', playVideoOnScroll, false)
1

My working solution in vanilla 2023 Javascript using IntersectionObserver:

document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function() {
    const videos = document.querySelectorAll('video');
    const observer = new IntersectionObserver((entries) => {
        entries.forEach(entry => {
            if (entry.isIntersecting) {
                entry.target.play();
            } else {
                entry.target.pause();
            }
        });
    });
    videos.forEach(video => {
        observer.observe(video);
    });
});
0

The accepted answer works, but introduces unnecessary complexity. The solution can be achieved with jQuery alone; there is no plugin needed to achieve the same results.

$(window).scroll(function () {
  const viewportBottom = window.scrollY + window.innerHeight;

  $('video').each(function () {
    if ($(this).offset().top + $(this).height() < window.scrollY) {
      $(this)[0].pause();
    } else if ($(this).offset().top < viewportBottom) {
      $(this)[0].play();
    }
  });
});

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