98

In IOS8 Safari there is a new bug with position fixed.

If you focus a textarea that is in a fixed panel, safari will scroll you to the bottom of the page.

This makes all sorts of UIs impossible to work with, since you have no way of entering text into textareas without scrolling your page all the way down and losing your place.

Is there any way to workaround this bug cleanly?

#a {
  height: 10000px;
  background: linear-gradient(red, blue);
}
#b {
  position: fixed;
  bottom: 20px;
  left: 10%;
  width: 100%;
  height: 300px;
}

textarea {
   width: 80%;
   height: 300px;
}
<html>
   <body>
   <div id="a"></div>
   <div id="b"><textarea></textarea></div>
   </body>
</html>
11
  • 1
    Would setting a z-index on #b help?
    – Ben
    Mar 12, 2015 at 5:08
  • 1
    z index is no help, maybe some fancy no op css transform would much with stack contexts, not sure. Mar 12, 2015 at 5:14
  • 1
    for context here is the discussion on Discourse: meta.discourse.org/t/dealing-with-ios-8-ipad-mobile-safari-bugs/… Mar 15, 2015 at 9:42
  • 90
    iOS safari is the new IE
    – geedubb
    Mar 22, 2015 at 9:21
  • 4
    @geedubb agreed. any moronic OS which ties its default browser version down to the OS is going to fall foul of the issues which has plagued IE for the past 7 years.
    – dewd
    Jun 26, 2015 at 9:55

12 Answers 12

63

Based on this good analysis of this issue, I've used this in html and body elements in css:

html,body{
    -webkit-overflow-scrolling : touch !important;
    overflow: auto !important;
    height: 100% !important;
}

I think it's working great for me.

6
  • 2
    worked for me too. This screwed up a lot of other things since I am manipulating my DOM on load, so I make this into a class, and added it to the html, body after the DOM has stabilized. Things like scrollTop dont work very well (I am doing auto scrolling), but again, you can add / remove the class while doing scrolling operations. Poor work on part of Safari team though.
    – Amarsh
    Jun 29, 2016 at 23:06
  • 1
    People looking at this option might also want to test transform: translateZ(0); from stackoverflow.com/questions/7808110/…
    – lkraav
    Feb 7, 2017 at 10:12
  • 1
    This solves the problem, but if you have animations they will look very choppy. Might be better to wrap it in a media query.
    – mmla
    Jun 7, 2017 at 23:55
  • Worked for me on iOS 10.3.
    – quotesBro
    Jun 27, 2017 at 15:07
  • It doesn't solve the problem. You need to intercept scrolling when virtual keyboard shows up and change height to specific value: stackoverflow.com/a/46044341/84661 Sep 4, 2017 at 23:10
36
+500

The best solution I could come up with is to switch to using position: absolute; on focus and calculating the position it was at when it was using position: fixed;. The trick is that the focus event fires too late, so touchstart must be used.

The solution in this answer mimics the correct behavior we had in iOS 7 very closely.

Requirements:

The body element must have positioning in order to ensure proper positioning when the element switches to absolute positioning.

body {
    position: relative;
}

The Code (Live Example):

The following code is a basic example for the provided test-case, and can be adapted for your specific use-case.

//Get the fixed element, and the input element it contains.
var fixed_el = document.getElementById('b');
var input_el = document.querySelector('textarea');
//Listen for touchstart, focus will fire too late.
input_el.addEventListener('touchstart', function() {
    //If using a non-px value, you will have to get clever, or just use 0 and live with the temporary jump.
    var bottom = parseFloat(window.getComputedStyle(fixed_el).bottom);
    //Switch to position absolute.
    fixed_el.style.position = 'absolute';
    fixed_el.style.bottom = (document.height - (window.scrollY + window.innerHeight) + bottom) + 'px';
    //Switch back when focus is lost.
    function blured() {
        fixed_el.style.position = '';
        fixed_el.style.bottom = '';
        input_el.removeEventListener('blur', blured);
    }
    input_el.addEventListener('blur', blured);
});

Here is the same code without the hack for comparison.

Caveat:

If the position: fixed; element has any other parent elements with positioning besides body, switching to position: absolute; may have unexpected behavior. Due to the nature of position: fixed; this is probably not a major issue, since nesting such elements is not common.

Recommendations:

While the use of the touchstart event will filter out most desktop environments, you will probably want to use user-agent sniffing so that this code will only run for the broken iOS 8, and not other devices such as Android and older iOS versions. Unfortunately, we don't yet know when Apple will fix this issue in iOS, but I would be surprised if it is not fixed in the next major version.

5
  • I wonder if double wrapping with a div and setting height to %100 on transparent wrapping div could trick it into avoiding this... Mar 18, 2015 at 7:33
  • @SamSaffron Could you clarify how such a technique might work? I tried a few things like this without success. Since the height of the document is ambiguous, I'm not sure how it could work. Mar 21, 2015 at 17:07
  • I was thinking simply have a "fixed" 100% height wrapper may work around this, possibly not Mar 22, 2015 at 21:23
  • @downvoter: Did I get something wrong? I agree this is a terrible solution, but I don't think there are any better ones. Jun 27, 2015 at 15:50
  • 6
    This didn't work for me, the input field still moves. Dec 8, 2015 at 3:07
8

I found a method that works without the need to change to position absolute!

Full uncommented code

var scrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
$(window).scroll(function(){
    scrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
});
var savedScrollPos = scrollPos;

function is_iOS() {
  var iDevices = [
    'iPad Simulator',
    'iPhone Simulator',
    'iPod Simulator',
    'iPad',
    'iPhone',
    'iPod'
  ];
  while (iDevices.length) {
    if (navigator.platform === iDevices.pop()){ return true; }
  }
  return false;
}

$('input[type=text]').on('touchstart', function(){
    if (is_iOS()){
        savedScrollPos = scrollPos;
        $('body').css({
            position: 'relative',
            top: -scrollPos
        });
        $('html').css('overflow','hidden');
    }
})
.blur(function(){
    if (is_iOS()){
        $('body, html').removeAttr('style');
        $(document).scrollTop(savedScrollPos);
    }
});

Breaking it down

First you need to have the fixed input field toward the top of the page in the HTML (it's a fixed element so it should semantically make sense to have it near the top anyway):

<!DOCTYPE HTML>

<html>

    <head>
      <title>Untitled</title>
    </head>

    <body>
        <form class="fixed-element">
            <input class="thing-causing-the-issue" type="text" />
        </form>

        <div class="everything-else">(content)</div>

    </body>

</html>

Then you need to save the current scroll position into global variables:

//Always know the current scroll position
var scrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
$(window).scroll(function(){
    scrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
});

//need to be able to save current scroll pos while keeping actual scroll pos up to date
var savedScrollPos = scrollPos;

Then you need a way to detect iOS devices so it doesn't affect things that don't need the fix (function taken from https://stackoverflow.com/a/9039885/1611058)

//function for testing if it is an iOS device
function is_iOS() {
  var iDevices = [
    'iPad Simulator',
    'iPhone Simulator',
    'iPod Simulator',
    'iPad',
    'iPhone',
    'iPod'
  ];

  while (iDevices.length) {
    if (navigator.platform === iDevices.pop()){ return true; }
  }

  return false;
}

Now that we have everything we need, here is the fix :)

//when user touches the input
$('input[type=text]').on('touchstart', function(){

    //only fire code if it's an iOS device
    if (is_iOS()){

        //set savedScrollPos to the current scroll position
        savedScrollPos = scrollPos;

        //shift the body up a number of pixels equal to the current scroll position
        $('body').css({
            position: 'relative',
            top: -scrollPos
        });

        //Hide all content outside of the top of the visible area
        //this essentially chops off the body at the position you are scrolled to so the browser can't scroll up any higher
        $('html').css('overflow','hidden');
    }
})

//when the user is done and removes focus from the input field
.blur(function(){

    //checks if it is an iOS device
    if (is_iOS()){

        //Removes the custom styling from the body and html attribute
        $('body, html').removeAttr('style');

        //instantly scrolls the page back down to where you were when you clicked on input field
        $(document).scrollTop(savedScrollPos);
    }
});
6
  • +1. This is a significantly less complicated fix than the accepted answer, if you have a non-trivial DOM hierarchy. This should have more upvotes
    – Anson Kao
    Sep 13, 2016 at 6:59
  • Could you provide this in native JS as well? Thanks so much!
    – mesqueeb
    Jul 15, 2017 at 10:07
  • @SamSaffron, is this answer really worked for u? can i have some example here. it dint worked for me? Feb 7, 2018 at 10:37
  • @SamSaffron,is this answer really solved your problem, can u send some example that worked for u, am working on the same, but it dint worked for me. Feb 7, 2018 at 10:41
  • @GaneshPutta It's possible that a more recent iOS update has made this not work any more. I posted this 2.5 years ago. It should still work though if you followed all the instructions exactly :/ Feb 7, 2018 at 22:41
4

I was able to fix this for select inputs by adding an event listener to the necessary select elements, then scrolling by an offset of one pixel when the select in question gains focus.

This isn't necessarily a good solution, but it's much simpler and more reliable than the other answers I've seen here. The browser seems to re-render/re-calculate the position: fixed; attribute based on the offset supplied in the window.scrollBy() function.

document.querySelector(".someSelect select").on("focus", function() {window.scrollBy(0, 1)});
2

Much like Mark Ryan Sallee suggested, I found that dynamically changing the height and overflow of my background element is the key - this gives Safari nothing to scroll to.

So after the modal's opening animation finishes, change the background's styling:

$('body > #your-background-element').css({
  'overflow': 'hidden',
  'height': 0
});

When you close the modal change it back:

$('body > #your-background-element').css({
  'overflow': 'auto',
  'height': 'auto'
});

While other answers are useful in simpler contexts, my DOM was too complicated (thanks SharePoint) to use the absolute/fixed position swap.

1

Cleanly? no.

I recently had this problem myself with a fixed search field in a sticky header, the best you can do at the moment is keep the scroll position in a variable at all times and upon selection make the fixed element's position absolute instead of fixed with a top position based on the document's scroll position.

This is however very ugly and still results in some strange back and forth scrolling before landing on the right place, but it is the closest I could get.

Any other solution would involve overriding the default scroll mechanics of the browser.

0

Haven't dealt with this particular bug, but maybe put an overflow: hidden; on the body when the text area is visible (or just active, depending on your design). This may have the effect of not giving the browser anywhere "down" to scroll to.

1
  • 1
    I cant even seem to get touchstart to trigger early enough to even consider that hack :( Mar 12, 2015 at 5:07
0

A possible solution would be to replace the input field.

  • Monitor click events on a div
  • focus a hidden input field to render the keyboard
  • replicate the content of the hidden input field into the fake input field

function focus() {
  $('#hiddeninput').focus();
}

$(document.body).load(focus);

$('.fakeinput').bind("click",function() {
    focus();
});

$("#hiddeninput").bind("keyup blur", function (){
  $('.fakeinput .placeholder').html(this.value);
});
#hiddeninput {
  position:fixed;
  top:0;left:-100vw;
  opacity:0;
  height:0px;
  width:0;
}
#hiddeninput:focus{
  outline:none;
}
.fakeinput {
  width:80vw;
  margin:15px auto;
  height:38px;
  border:1px solid #000;
  color:#000;
  font-size:18px;
  padding:12px 15px 10px;
  display:block;
  overflow:hidden;
}
.placeholder {
  opacity:0.6;
  vertical-align:middle;
}
<input type="text" id="hiddeninput"></input>

<div class="fakeinput">
    <span class="placeholder">First Name</span>
</div> 


codepen

0

None of these solutions worked for me because my DOM is complicated and I have dynamic infinite scroll pages, so I had to create my own.

Background: I am using a fixed header and an element further down that sticks below it once the user scrolls that far down. This element has a search input field. In addition, I have dynamic pages added during forward and backwards scroll.

Problem: In iOS, anytime the user clicked on the input in the fixed element, the browser would scroll all the way to the top of the page. This not only caused undesired behavior, it also triggered my dynamic page add at the top of the page.

Expected Solution: No scroll in iOS (none at all) when the user clicks on the input in the sticky element.

Solution:

     /*Returns a function, that, as long as it continues to be invoked, will not
    be triggered. The function will be called after it stops being called for
    N milliseconds. If `immediate` is passed, trigger the function on the
    leading edge, instead of the trailing.*/
    function debounce(func, wait, immediate) {
        var timeout;
        return function () {
            var context = this, args = arguments;
            var later = function () {
                timeout = null;
                if (!immediate) func.apply(context, args);
            };
            var callNow = immediate && !timeout;
            clearTimeout(timeout);
            timeout = setTimeout(later, wait);
            if (callNow) func.apply(context, args);
        };
    };

     function is_iOS() {
        var iDevices = [
          'iPad Simulator',
          'iPhone Simulator',
          'iPod Simulator',
          'iPad',
          'iPhone',
          'iPod'
        ];
        while (iDevices.length) {
            if (navigator.platform === iDevices.pop()) { return true; }
        }
        return false;
    }

    $(document).on("scrollstop", debounce(function () {
        //console.log("Stopped scrolling!");
        if (is_iOS()) {
            var yScrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
            if (yScrollPos > 200) { //200 here to offset my fixed header (50px) and top banner (150px)
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'absolute');
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('top', yScrollPos + 50 + 'px'); //50 for fixed header
            }
            else {
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'inherit');
            }
        }
    },250,true));

    $(document).on("scrollstart", debounce(function () {
        //console.log("Started scrolling!");
        if (is_iOS()) {
            var yScrollPos = $(document).scrollTop();
            if (yScrollPos > 200) { //200 here to offset my fixed header (50px) and top banner (150px)
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('position', 'fixed');
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('width', '100%');
                $('#searchBarDiv').css('top', '50px'); //50 for fixed header
            }
        }
    },250,true));

Requirements: JQuery mobile is required for the startsroll and stopscroll functions to work.

Debounce is included to smooth out any lag created by the sticky element.

Tested in iOS10.

0

I just jumped over something like this yesterday by setting height of #a to max visible height (body height was in my case) when #b is visible

ex:

    <script>
    document.querySelector('#b').addEventListener('focus', function () {
      document.querySelector('#a').style.height = document.body.clientHeight;
    })
    </script>

ps: sorry for late example, just noticed it was needed.

2
  • 14
    Please include a code example to make it clear how your fix can help Mar 12, 2015 at 6:33
  • @EruPenkman sorry just noticed your comment, hope that helps.
    – Onur Uyar
    Mar 6, 2017 at 10:39
0

This is now fixed in iOS 10.3!

Hacks should no longer be needed.

4
  • 1
    Can you point to any release notes that point this out as being fixed?
    – bluepnume
    Jul 5, 2017 at 23:19
  • Apple are very secretive, they closed my bug report I confirmed it now works proper, that is all I got :) Jul 6, 2017 at 17:49
  • 3
    I still have this issue on iOS 11
    – zekia
    Feb 10, 2020 at 13:30
  • 3
    No, this is still an issue even on iOS 13. Sep 6, 2020 at 18:57
0

I had the issue, below lines of code resolved it for me -

html{

 overflow: scroll; 
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;

}

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