154

Is there a way to get the mouse wheel events (not talking about scroll events) in jQuery?

5

15 Answers 15

223
​$(document).ready(function(){
    $('#foo').bind('mousewheel', function(e){
        if(e.originalEvent.wheelDelta /120 > 0) {
            console.log('scrolling up !');
        }
        else{
            console.log('scrolling down !');
        }
    });
});
9
  • 53
    The DOMMouseScroll event is used in FF, so you have to to listen on both .bind('DOMMouseScroll mousewheel') { evetns developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/DOM_event_reference/… Apr 7, 2013 at 10:26
  • 10
    e.originalEvent.wheelDelta is undefined in FF23 Sep 10, 2013 at 10:44
  • 27
    You don't need to divide by 120 it is useless waste of cpu
    – venimus
    Sep 30, 2013 at 11:21
  • 2
    But anyway, why would you want to divide it by 120? What's that constant? (You don't have to, as venimus pointed out.)
    – Las Ten
    Oct 4, 2015 at 20:44
  • 1
    I would recommend the use of the 2nd argument of event handler function - delta: $('#el').on('mousewheel', function(e, delta) { if(delta > 0) { /*up*/ } else { /*down*/ }}). See this answer.
    – Mojo
    Apr 18, 2017 at 9:39
155

Binding to both mousewheel and DOMMouseScroll ended up working really well for me:

$(window).bind('mousewheel DOMMouseScroll', function(event){
    if (event.originalEvent.wheelDelta > 0 || event.originalEvent.detail < 0) {
        // scroll up
    }
    else {
        // scroll down
    }
});

This method is working in IE9+, Chrome 33, and Firefox 27.


Edit - Mar 2016

I decided to revisit this issue since it's been a while. The MDN page for the scroll event has a great way of retrieving the scroll position that makes use of requestAnimationFrame, which is highly preferable to my previous detection method. I modified their code to provide better compatibility in addition to scroll direction and position:

(function() {
  var supportOffset = window.pageYOffset !== undefined,
    lastKnownPos = 0,
    ticking = false,
    scrollDir,
    currYPos;

  function doSomething(scrollPos, scrollDir) {
    // Your code goes here...
    console.log('scroll pos: ' + scrollPos + ' | scroll dir: ' + scrollDir);
  }

  window.addEventListener('wheel', function(e) {
    currYPos = supportOffset ? window.pageYOffset : document.body.scrollTop;
    scrollDir = lastKnownPos > currYPos ? 'up' : 'down';
    lastKnownPos = currYPos;

    if (!ticking) {
      window.requestAnimationFrame(function() {
        doSomething(lastKnownPos, scrollDir);
        ticking = false;
      });
    }
    ticking = true;
  });
})();

See the Pen Vanilla JS Scroll Tracking by Jesse Dupuy (@blindside85) on CodePen.

This code is currently working in Chrome v50, Firefox v44, Safari v9, and IE9+

References:

10
  • This worked the best for me. However, this script runs per "click" of the scroll wheel. This can be overwhelming for some scripts to use. Is there a way to treat each scroll event as one instance, instead of run the script per scroll wheel click?
    – invot
    May 28, 2014 at 17:15
  • Not especially. From what I've seen, many people will either avoid dealing with scroll tracking, or they'll use a timer instead (e.g. check the user's position on the page every x milliseconds, etc). If there's a more performant solution out there, I definitely want to know about it! Aug 7, 2014 at 23:48
  • 1
    I found a way to do this: stackoverflow.com/questions/23919035/…
    – invot
    Aug 7, 2014 at 23:58
  • 1
    Thanks for the update. Can you copy your code into your answer? Never know if codepen might go down someday. It's happened before.
    – JDB
    Apr 23, 2016 at 15:15
  • 2
    @JesseDupuy, I would upvote this answer, but your updated version doesn`t work if the document fits the view ("width: 100vh; height: 100vh") or got "overflow: hidden;". "window.addEventListener('scroll', callback)" is not the correct answer to "window.addEventListener('mousewheel', callback)".
    – Daniel
    May 6, 2016 at 9:52
72

As of now in 2017, you can just write

$(window).on('wheel', function(event){

  // deltaY obviously records vertical scroll, deltaX and deltaZ exist too.
  // this condition makes sure it's vertical scrolling that happened
  if(event.originalEvent.deltaY !== 0){

    if(event.originalEvent.deltaY < 0){
      // wheeled up
    }
    else {
      // wheeled down
    }
  }
});

Works with current Firefox 51, Chrome 56, IE9+

2
  • This answers works better than all the others!
    – VDWWD
    Apr 15, 2021 at 20:30
  • 1
    event.originalEvent.deltaY can be 0 when scrolling horizontally (just tried it in my laptop), so you probably want if x<0 else if x>0.
    – ajax333221
    May 29, 2021 at 20:01
49

There's a plugin that detects up/down mouse wheel and velocity over a region.

1
  • 40
    plugin? come on .. check the answer below you can do it without
    – user2869113
    Oct 13, 2013 at 15:41
41

Answers talking about "mousewheel" event are refering to a deprecated event. The standard event is simply "wheel". See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Reference/Events/wheel

4
  • 20
    I tried these and found: "wheel" works in Firefox and IE but not Chrome. "mousewheel" works in Chrome and IE but not Firefox. "DOMMouseScroll" works only in Firefox. Aug 22, 2013 at 20:39
  • 5
    Looks like Chrome added support for "wheel" in August of 2013: code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=227454 Jul 7, 2014 at 14:11
  • 2
    Safari still doesn't support the wheel event.
    – Thayne
    Sep 11, 2014 at 16:11
  • As your documentation says, wheel event is supported on Edge not IE which is not the same thing. CanIuse
    – Alex
    Mar 6, 2018 at 7:16
16

This worked for me:)

 //Firefox
 $('#elem').bind('DOMMouseScroll', function(e){
     if(e.originalEvent.detail > 0) {
         //scroll down
         console.log('Down');
     }else {
         //scroll up
         console.log('Up');
     }

     //prevent page fom scrolling
     return false;
 });

 //IE, Opera, Safari
 $('#elem').bind('mousewheel', function(e){
     if(e.originalEvent.wheelDelta < 0) {
         //scroll down
         console.log('Down');
     }else {
         //scroll up
         console.log('Up');
     }

     //prevent page fom scrolling
     return false;
 });

from stackoverflow

14

Here is a vanilla solution. Can be used in jQuery if the event passed to the function is event.originalEvent which jQuery makes available as property of the jQuery event. Or if inside the callback function under we add before first line: event = event.originalEvent;.

This code normalizes the wheel speed/amount and is positive for what would be a forward scroll in a typical mouse, and negative in a backward mouse wheel movement.

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/BXhzD/

var wheel = document.getElementById('wheel');

function report(ammout) {
    wheel.innerHTML = 'wheel ammout: ' + ammout;
}

function callback(event) {
    var normalized;
    if (event.wheelDelta) {
        normalized = (event.wheelDelta % 120 - 0) == -0 ? event.wheelDelta / 120 : event.wheelDelta / 12;
    } else {
        var rawAmmount = event.deltaY ? event.deltaY : event.detail;
        normalized = -(rawAmmount % 3 ? rawAmmount * 10 : rawAmmount / 3);
    }
    report(normalized);
}

var event = 'onwheel' in document ? 'wheel' : 'onmousewheel' in document ? 'mousewheel' : 'DOMMouseScroll';
window.addEventListener(event, callback);

There is also a plugin for jQuery, which is more verbose in the code and some extra sugar: https://github.com/brandonaaron/jquery-mousewheel

0
8

This is working in each IE, Firefox and Chrome's latest versions.

$(document).ready(function(){
        $('#whole').bind('DOMMouseScroll mousewheel', function(e){
            if(e.originalEvent.wheelDelta > 0 || e.originalEvent.detail < 0) {
                alert("up");
            }
            else{
                alert("down");
            }
        });
    });
5

I was stuck in this issue today and found this code is working fine for me

$('#content').on('mousewheel', function(event) {
    //console.log(event.deltaX, event.deltaY, event.deltaFactor);
    if(event.deltaY > 0) {
      console.log('scroll up');
    } else {
      console.log('scroll down');
    }
});
4

use this code

 knob.bind('mousewheel', function(e){  
 if(e.originalEvent.wheelDelta < 0) {
    moveKnob('down');
  } else {
    moveKnob('up');
 }
  return false;
});
1

The plugin that @DarinDimitrov posted, jquery-mousewheel, is broken with jQuery 3+. It would be more advisable to use jquery-wheel which works with jQuery 3+.

If you don't want to go the jQuery route, MDN highly cautions using the mousewheel event as it's nonstandard and unsupported in many places. It instead says that you should use the wheel event as you get much more specificity over exactly what the values you're getting mean. It's supported by most major browsers.

0

my combination looks like this. it fades out and fades in on each scroll down/up. otherwise you have to scroll up to the header, for fading the header in.

var header = $("#header");
$('#content-container').bind('mousewheel', function(e){
    if(e.originalEvent.wheelDelta > 0) {
        if (header.data('faded')) {
            header.data('faded', 0).stop(true).fadeTo(800, 1);
        }
    }
    else{
        if (!header.data('faded')) header.data('faded', 1).stop(true).fadeTo(800, 0);
    }
});

the above one is not optimized for touch/mobile, I think this one does it better for all mobile:

var iScrollPos = 0;
var header = $("#header");
$('#content-container').scroll(function () {

    var iCurScrollPos = $(this).scrollTop();
    if (iCurScrollPos > iScrollPos) {
        if (!header.data('faded')) header.data('faded', 1).stop(true).fadeTo(800, 0);

    } else {
        //Scrolling Up
        if (header.data('faded')) {
            header.data('faded', 0).stop(true).fadeTo(800, 1);
        }
    }
    iScrollPos = iCurScrollPos;

});
0

If using mentioned jquery mousewheel plugin, then what about to use the 2nd argument of event handler function - delta:

$('#my-element').on('mousewheel', function(event, delta) {
    if(delta > 0) {
    console.log('scroll up');
    } 
    else {
    console.log('scroll down');
    }
});
0

I think many key things are a bit all over the place and I needed to read all the answers to make my code work as I wanted, so I will post my findings in just one place:

  • You should use "wheel" event over the other deprecated or browser specific events.
  • Many people here is getting something wrong: the opposite of x>0 is x<=0 and the opposite of x<0 is x>=0, many of the answers in here will trigger scrolling down or up incorrectly when x=0 (horizontal scrolling).
  • Someone was asking how to put sensitivity on it, for this you can use setTimeout() with like 50 ms of delay that changes some helper flag isWaiting=false and you protect yourself with if(isWaiting) then don't do anything. When it fires you manually change isWaiting=true and just below this line you start the setTimeout again who will later change isWaiting=false after 50 ms.
-3

I got same problem recently where $(window).mousewheel was returning undefined

What I did was $(window).on('mousewheel', function() {});

Further to process it I am using:

function (event) {
    var direction = null,
        key;

    if (event.type === 'mousewheel') {
        if (yourFunctionForGetMouseWheelDirection(event) > 0) {
            direction = 'up';
        } else {
            direction = 'down';
        }
    }
}
2
  • You did not say what has newUtilities.getMouseWheelDirection
    – ccsakuweb
    Jun 29, 2014 at 19:39
  • It's out of scope of this question. SO it's not copy paste website. Jul 1, 2014 at 7:47

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