52

I am working with an Angular 6 project in which I have disabled/removed hash-location-strategy which removes # from URL.

due to this change the link having:

<li routerLinkActive="active">
   <a [routerLink]="['/settings']">Contact Settings</a>
   <ul class="child-link-sub">
      <li>
         <a href="#contactTypes">Contact Types</a>
      </li>
   </ul>
</li>

is no more working it just skips the current components URL and puts #contactTypes after localhost.

I found this github issue which should solve the issue using

<a [routerLink]="['/settings/']" fragment="contactTypes" >Contact Types</a>

which puts #contactTypes at the end of the URL but it doesn't scroll to the top of the browser.

Source: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/6595

8 Answers 8

62

Angular 6.1 comes with an option called anchorScrolling that lives in router module's ExtraOptions. As the anchorScrolling definition says:

Configures if the router should scroll to the element when the url has a fragment.

'disabled' -- does nothing (default).

'enabled' -- scrolls to the element. This option will be the default in the future.

Anchor scrolling does not happen on 'popstate'. Instead, we restore the position that we stored or scroll to the top.

You can use it like that:

const routerOptions: ExtraOptions = {
  useHash: false,
  anchorScrolling: 'enabled',
  // ...any other options you'd like to use
};

// then just import your RouterModule with these options

RouterModule.forRoot(MY_APP_ROUTES, routerOptions)
9
  • 29
    Thanks for this answer. What I missed was that you have to use routerLink="./" fragment="anchorName" you can not use href="#anchorName" Nov 27, 2018 at 8:41
  • 1
    Also, this only works on the first click. Does not work on the 2nd.
    – Phil
    Jun 20, 2019 at 5:28
  • 12
    For this to work on the 2nd click, you need to add onSameUrlNavigation: 'reload' option in the routerOptions. Sep 16, 2019 at 16:02
  • 1
    To get this solution to work I had to also add angular.io/api/router/ExtraOptions#scrollPositionRestoration
    – Jessy
    May 19, 2020 at 17:18
  • 2
    ^^^ Confirmed, this does work in Angular 11 too. All options mentioned above work too, i.e. anchorScrolling: 'enabled', onSameUrlNavigation: 'reload', scrollPositionRestoration: 'enabled'.
    – Krishnan
    Feb 15, 2021 at 15:47
31

I was looking for a similar solution and tried to use the ngx-scroll-to package and found that its not working in latest version of angular so decided to look into other option and found that we can use scrollIntoView

HTML code :

<button (click)="scrollToElement(target)"></button>
<div #target>Your target</div>

Ts code :

  scrollToElement($element): void {
    console.log($element);
    $element.scrollIntoView({behavior: "smooth", block: "start", inline: "nearest"});
  }
4
  • Thanks, your answer is absolute good and easy to understand with simple and short code
    – WasiF
    Sep 5, 2018 at 8:29
  • can you provide for dynamic linking? There are other answers for this purpose but code is not simple
    – WasiF
    Sep 5, 2018 at 8:38
  • 4
    This is not ideal, because it does not provide the user with a link that they can share with others, such as "example.org/help#installing".
    – ANeves
    Mar 26, 2019 at 14:44
  • 1
    @ANeves Yes , "This is not ideal" right now, but that feature achorScrolling was not available when i answered the question. since angular 6.1 was released later .This solution may be helpful for those who work in older version of angular . Its great that solutions are evolving with every new version of angular Mar 26, 2019 at 17:56
12

This worked for me (I'm using Angular 12.1.3):

On the HTML template:

<a (click)="scrollTo('anchorId')">Scroll to another position</a>

Pass the id of the element you want to scroll to (without the hashtag symbol #) to the function.

Then, on Typescript, use .scrollIntoView to make the browser scroll to the position of that element.

scrollTo(element: any): void {
  (document.getElementById(element) as HTMLElement).scrollIntoView({behavior: "smooth", block: "start", inline: "nearest"});
}
1
  • In the HTML template: <div id="anchorId">
    – eekinci
    Jun 10, 2022 at 8:05
7

For accessibility reasons I had to a link at the beginning of the document to provide direct access to the content to user using a screen reader, skipping that way parts of the page repeating from page to page.

As I needed the link to stay focusable (preferably keeping the href attribute), as I was actually outside the app-root or any component (still solution works inside a component), to do that I used simple good old fashion html and javascript :

<a href="./#content"
     onclick="event.preventDefault(); location.hash='content';"
     class="content-shortcut"
     title="Access page content directly"
     i18n-title
     aria-label="Access page content directly"
     i18n-label>Access page content directly</a>
  <style>
    .content-shortcut {
      position: absolute;
      opacity: 0;
      height: 0px;
      font-size: 1px;
    }

    .content-shortcut:focus,
    .content-shortcut:active {
      position: relative;
      opacity: 1;
      height: auto;
      font-size: 1em;
      display: block;
      color: black;
      background: white;
    }

  </style>
2
  • this is what i have to do as well, thanks for the post Sep 3, 2019 at 17:01
  • The best solution for meeting WCAG requirement to skip main navigation. Very simple and elegant. Thanks! Apr 30, 2020 at 19:47
4

This is for Angular 9, but, I am sure the community will benefit this,

You can use Location in the @angular/common to get the current path.

Let's say you have the following element with an id to focus

<div id="bring-me-to-the-focus">

I am only showing extracted code blocks here.

import { Location } from '@angular/common';

constructor(private location: Location) { }

this.location.path() + '#bring-me-to-the-focus'; 

I am sure this will help someone :)

Cheers.

1
  • I don't think this is necessary since router provide this feature with anchorScrolling and onSameUrlNavigation Jan 14, 2021 at 12:51
3

As pointed out by Nitin Avula in a comment, using routerLink for a hash anchor only works if you are navigating to a different route or have onSameUrlNavigation enabled in your router config.

A way to get round this is to get rid of routerLink and instead use this.router.navigate in your *.component.ts file with the fragment parameter:

HTML -

<a (click)="scrollToContactTypes()">Contact Types</a>

TypeScript -

constructor(private router: Router) { }

scrollToContactTypes() {
    this.router.onSameUrlNavigation = "reload";
    this.router.navigate(["/settings"], { fragment: "contactTypes" }).finally(() => {
        this.router.onSameUrlNavigation = "ignore"; // Restore config after navigation completes
    });
}
1
  • Interesting answer if you're pretending to allow onSameUrlNavigation = "reload" for some reason IDK Jan 14, 2021 at 12:50
2

use ngx page scroll

 <a pageScroll href="#awesomePart">Take me to the awesomeness</a>
 <h2 id="awesomePart">This is where the awesome happens</h2>
3
  • 2
    Nice answer, it's working well. If you are in the /home page for example, you need to do href="home#anchor". +1
    – PierreD
    Feb 1, 2019 at 12:10
  • 3
    You do not need a library for that, this behavior is included in the angular router.
    – Machado
    Jun 21, 2019 at 17:14
  • @Machado yes you are right we just need to add ` anchorScrolling: 'enabled'` in app routing module inside ExtraOptions for forRoot
    – Santosh
    Jul 20 at 5:25
-1

You need to use hash routing strategy to enable the hash scrolling.

you need to give second argument as an object like RouterModule.forRoot([],{useHash:true}}. It will work.

1
  • 5
    hash strategy deals with hashes as routes, isn't it so?
    – Ayyash
    Sep 12, 2019 at 5:11

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