I know this is a really old question, but here is a cool cross-browser solution utilizing only HTML and CSS.
HTML:
<div class="barrel">
<div class="clipper">
<p class="clippercontent">Lorem</p>
</div>
<div id='navcontainer'>
<p class="navcontent" >I want to be able to scroll through the whole page, but without the scrollbar being shown. Is there a way I can remove the scrollbar while still being able to scroll the whole page? With just CSS or HTML, please.
</p>
</div>
</div>
Principle: The #navcontainer will house our .navcontent, and will have scrollbars. The .barrel will hide the scrollbar of the #navcontainer.
CSS:
.barrel{
border: 0.8px solid #110011;
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
}
.barrel #navcontainer{
overflow: scroll; overflow-y: hidden;
position: absolute;/* absolute positioned contents will not affect their parents */
top: 0; left: 0; right: 0;
white-space: nowrap;
}
/* style .clipper and .clippercontent, as a structural-image of #navcontainer and .navcontent respectively This will help .barrel have the same height as the #navcontainer */
.barrel .clipper{
overflow: hidden;
width: 0px;
white-space: nowrap;
}
.navcontent, .clippercontent{
padding: 3px 1px;
}
::-webkit-scrollbar
is changing the background color of section where the data ends. Even after addingbackground-color
property to white, it doesnot change anything