I'm using jquery.nicescroll and binding scroll event to detect when the scroll has reached the bottom but my problem is JS only detects scroll event only IF user can actually scroll. Which means, that if I have reached the bottom of the div and actually scroll down, JS doesn't bind scroll event.
My goal would be to set a timer when user reaches the bottom of the div and if they scroll again (after the timer) it would fire a function. But I don't want that function to be fired when user reaches the bottom (imagine your are scrolling down to read the end of the page and after that, you scroll again to go to another section of the page). I need to time the action to make sure the function doesn't fire because of "too many scroll" to go to the bottom of the page. I need to know the user already is at the bottom and scrolled again after a while.
Anyway, the thing I'm looking for is a way to detect the mouse's roll/scroll even when you can't actually scroll more. Just the action of scrolling, not the actual scrolling.
wheel
event (different browsers previously implemented this differently, but trywheel
in the first instance). Don't forget to also check forspace
,pagedown
andcursor/arrow down
.wheel
. It will only be raised even if the div can't be scrolling added the wrapper to give it somewhere to scroll, but not needed - see update: jsfiddle.net/45b9gnx6 with #d3 not inside a wrapper but still receives the event. Note: this won't work with mobile devices that don't have a wheel.