How do I know when I've stopped scrolling using Javascript?
9 Answers
You can add an event handler for the scroll
event and start a timeout. Something like:
var timer = null;
window.addEventListener('scroll', function() {
if(timer !== null) {
clearTimeout(timer);
}
timer = setTimeout(function() {
// do something
}, 150);
}, false);
This will start a timeout and wait 150ms. If a new scroll
event occurred in the meantime, the timer is aborted and a new one is created. If not, the function will be executed. You probably have to adjust the timing.
Also note that IE uses a different way to attach event listeners, this should give a good introduction: quirksmode - Advanced event registration models
-
-
@bboymaanu: I don't know what you are trying to tell me with that comment. Please elaborate. Commented Dec 4, 2013 at 15:51
-
Thanks for your comment, The issue is that when hold scroll still
setTimeout
working :(, is there any solution that when stopped working then run the code, LikejQuery
callback ?#– Mo.Commented Dec 4, 2013 at 16:48 -
3I still don't understand the problem. A callback is just a function which is passed to and called by another function. E.g. the function passed to
setTimeout
is a callback or the the event handler is a callback. Anyways, if you have an actual problem/question, please ask a question. Commented Dec 4, 2013 at 16:51 -
3if
$(window)
is jQuery,addEventListener
is undefined.$(window).on('scroll')
might work. Commented Nov 27, 2016 at 11:54
There isn't a "Stopped Scrolling" event. If you want to do something after the user has finished scrolling, you can set a timer in the "OnScroll" event. If you get another "OnScroll" event fired then reset the timer. When the timer finally does fire, then you can assume the scrolling has stopped. I would think 500 milliseconds would be a good duration to start with.
Here's some sample code that works in IE and Chrome:
<html>
<body onscroll="bodyScroll();">
<script language="javascript">
var scrollTimer = -1;
function bodyScroll() {
document.body.style.backgroundColor = "white";
if (scrollTimer != -1)
clearTimeout(scrollTimer);
scrollTimer = window.setTimeout("scrollFinished()", 500);
}
function scrollFinished() {
document.body.style.backgroundColor = "red";
}
</script>
<div style="height:2000px;">
Scroll the page down. The page will turn red when the scrolling has finished.
</div>
</body>
</html>
-
2Thanks for the pure javascript, NON-jQuery code, and the effective example! It works well on Firefox, too. Commented Nov 13, 2015 at 16:23
-
Pure JS is hard to find on stack these days, thanks for the legit non-jQuery solution. Commented Mar 9, 2016 at 9:43
-
1@MerakMarey I guess, you're not familiar with Needs More jQuery. Sometimes pure JavaScript is a rare treat :) P.S. I'm, for one, not interested in the magic show. I want to know what's happening behind the curtain.– akinuriCommented Apr 29, 2019 at 12:31
-
1@akinuri That is a one good joke, but that's all it is...a joke...The idea of frameworks abstracting all the "magic work" is more beneficial than knowing what's behind the curtain..(which you can still do, if you want to...jQuery IS still Javascript..you can change, and even improve the code or whatev you want to do..)..but this will put you off the main goal, which is to get the job done IN TIME..which is MORE IMPORTANT than knowing all the little details...believe me, I one time I had the same opinion..but no...now I do :
var a =1; var b =null; $.when(b=a+2).then(alert(b));
:) Commented Apr 30, 2019 at 23:00 -
Actually there is a
scrollend
event now... although as of 2022 it doesn't quite have full support yet. see Documentation & Compatibility Commented Jan 10, 2023 at 10:18
Here's a more modern, Promise-based solution I found on a repo called scroll-into-view-if-needed
Instead of using addEventListener
on the scroll
event it uses requestAnimationFrame
to watch for frames with no movement and resolves when there have been 20 frames without movement.
function waitForScrollEnd () {
let last_changed_frame = 0
let last_x = window.scrollX
let last_y = window.scrollY
return new Promise( resolve => {
function tick(frames) {
// We requestAnimationFrame either for 500 frames or until 20 frames with
// no change have been observed.
if (frames >= 500 || frames - last_changed_frame > 20) {
resolve()
} else {
if (window.scrollX != last_x || window.scrollY != last_y) {
last_changed_frame = frames
last_x = window.scrollX
last_y = window.scrollY
}
requestAnimationFrame(tick.bind(null, frames + 1))
}
}
tick(0)
})
}
With async/await and then
await waitForScrollEnd()
waitForScrollEnd().then(() => { /* Do things */ })
Additionally, there's the scrollend
event which will eventually be the definitive answer, but as of June 2023 seems to only be fully supported on Chrome and Firefox.
document.onscrollend = event => {
// scroll ended
};
aScrollingElement.onscrollend = (event) => {
// scroll ended
};
window.addEventListener("scrollend", (event) => {
// scroll ended
});
aScrollingElement.addEventListener("scrollend", (event) => {
// scroll ended
});
(function( $ ) {
$(function() {
var $output = $( "#output" ),
scrolling = "<span id='scrolling'>Scrolling</span>",
stopped = "<span id='stopped'>Stopped</span>";
$( window ).scroll(function() {
$output.html( scrolling );
clearTimeout( $.data( this, "scrollCheck" ) );
$.data( this, "scrollCheck", setTimeout(function() {
$output.html( stopped );
}, 250) );
});
});
})( jQuery );
=======>>>> Working Example here
-
1Please don't post identical answers to multiple questions. Post one good answer, then vote/flag to close the other questions as duplicates. If the question is not a duplicate, tailor your answers to the question Commented Aug 21, 2015 at 7:45
-
@kleopatra Good suggestion. the reason i posted this answer to every question so that everyone can get benefit from it. there are so many questions related to this. maybe it could be useful for anyone on any question. Commented Aug 21, 2015 at 11:11
-
it worked when all the other methods failed. However, could you please explain the "scrollCheck" in a bit detail? Commented Oct 15, 2015 at 12:26
I did something like this:
var scrollEvents = (function(document, $){
var d = {
scrolling: false,
scrollDirection : 'none',
scrollTop: 0,
eventRegister: {
scroll: [],
scrollToTop: [],
scrollToBottom: [],
scrollStarted: [],
scrollStopped: [],
scrollToTopStarted: [],
scrollToBottomStarted: []
},
getScrollTop: function(){
return d.scrollTop;
},
setScrollTop: function(y){
d.scrollTop = y;
},
isScrolling: function(){
return d.scrolling;
},
setScrolling: function(bool){
var oldVal = d.isScrolling();
d.scrolling = bool;
if(bool){
d.executeCallbacks('scroll');
if(oldVal !== bool){
d.executeCallbacks('scrollStarted');
}
}else{
d.executeCallbacks('scrollStopped');
}
},
getScrollDirection : function(){
return d.scrollDirection;
},
setScrollDirection : function(direction){
var oldDirection = d.getScrollDirection();
d.scrollDirection = direction;
if(direction === 'UP'){
d.executeCallbacks('scrollToTop');
if(direction !== oldDirection){
d.executeCallbacks('scrollToTopStarted');
}
}else if(direction === 'DOWN'){
d.executeCallbacks('scrollToBottom');
if(direction !== oldDirection){
d.executeCallbacks('scrollToBottomStarted');
}
}
},
init : function(){
d.setScrollTop($(document).scrollTop());
var timer = null;
$(window).scroll(function(){
d.setScrolling(true);
var x = d.getScrollTop();
setTimeout(function(){
var y = $(document).scrollTop();
d.setScrollTop(y);
if(x > y){
d.setScrollDirection('UP');
}else{
d.setScrollDirection('DOWN');
}
}, 100);
if(timer !== 'undefined' && timer !== null){
clearTimeout(timer);
}
timer = setTimeout(function(){
d.setScrolling(false);
d.setScrollDirection('NONE');
}, 200);
});
},
registerEvents : function(eventName, callback){
if(typeof eventName !== 'undefined' && typeof callback === 'function' && typeof d.eventRegister[eventName] !== 'undefined'){
d.eventRegister[eventName].push(callback);
}
},
executeCallbacks: function(eventName){
var callabacks = d.eventRegister[eventName];
for(var k in callabacks){
if(callabacks.hasOwnProperty(k)){
callabacks[k](d.getScrollTop());
}
}
}
};
return d;
})(document, $);
the code is available here: documentScrollEvents
I was trying too add a display:block property for social icons that was previously hidden on scroll event and then again hide after 2seconds. But
I too had a same problem as my code for timeout after first scroll would start automatically and did not had reset timeout idea. As it didn't had proper reset function.But after I saw David's idea on this question I was able to reset timeout even if someone again scrolled before actually completing previous timeout.
problem code shown below before solving
$(window).scroll(function(){ setTimeout(function(){ $('.fixed-class').slideUp('slow'); },2000); });
edited and working code with reset timer if next scroll occurs before 2s
var timer=null; $(window).scroll(function(){ $('.fixed-class').css("display", "block"); if(timer !== null) { clearTimeout(timer);
} timer=setTimeout(function(){ $('.fixed-class').slideUp('slow'); },2000);});
My working code will trigger a hidden division of class named 'fixed-class' to show in block on every scroll. From start of latest scroll the timer will count 2 sec and then again change the display from block to hidden.
Minor update in your answer. Use mouseover and out function.
$(document).ready(function() {
function ticker() {
$('#ticker li:first').slideUp(function() {
$(this).appendTo($('#ticker')).slideDown();
});
}
var ticke= setInterval(function(){
ticker();
}, 3000);
$('#ticker li').mouseover(function() {
clearInterval(ticke);
}).mouseout(function() {
ticke= setInterval(function(){ ticker(); }, 3000);
});
});
For more precision you can also check the scroll position:
function onScrollEndOnce(callback, target = null) {
let timeout
let targetTop
const startPosition = Math.ceil(document.documentElement.scrollTop)
if (target) {
targetTop = Math.ceil(target.getBoundingClientRect().top + document.documentElement.scrollTop)
}
function finish(removeEventListener = true) {
if (removeEventListener) {
window.removeEventListener('scroll', onScroll)
}
callback()
}
function isScrollReached() {
const currentPosition = Math.ceil(document.documentElement.scrollTop)
if (targetTop == null) {
return false
} else if (targetTop >= startPosition) {
return currentPosition >= targetTop
} else {
return currentPosition <= targetTop
}
}
function onScroll() {
if (timeout) {
clearTimeout(timeout)
}
if (isScrollReached()) {
finish()
} else {
timeout = setTimeout(finish, 500)
}
}
if (isScrollReached()) {
finish(false)
} else {
window.addEventListener('scroll', onScroll)
}
}
Usage example:
const target = document.querySelector('#some-element')
onScrollEndOnce(() => console.log('scroll end'), target)
window.scrollTo({
top: Math.ceil(target.getBoundingClientRect().top + document.documentElement.scrollTop),
behavior: 'smooth',
})
Here's an answer that doesn't use any sort of timer, thus in my case predicted when the scrolling actually ended, and is not just paused for a bit.
function detectScrollEnd(element, onEndHandler) {
let scrolling = false;
element.addEventListener('mouseup', detect);
element.addEventListener('scroll', detect);
function detect(e) {
if (e.type === 'scroll') {
scrolling = true;
} else {
if (scrolling) {
scrolling = false;
onEndHandler?.();
}
}
}
}
.addEventListener()
. Can be found at github.com/akinuri/scroll. Here's a demo.scrollend
event now... although as of 2022 it doesn't quite have full support yet. see Documentation & Compatibility for info.