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I'm wonder how the custom scrollbar on Facebook has been made.

Is it only css or some javascript as well?

If yes can i have an idea of what the code looks like?

This question is specific to Facebook scrollbar style and not how to simply have a custom scrollbar

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4 Answers 4

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This link should get you started. Long story short, a div that has been styled to look like a scrollbar is used to catch click-and-drag events. Wired up to these events are methods that scroll the contents of another div which is set to an arbitrary height and typically has a css rule of overflow:scroll (there are variants on the css rules but you get the idea).

I'm all about the learning experience -- but after you've learned how it works, I recommend using a library (of which there are many) to do it. It's one of those "don't reinvent" things...

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Facebook uses a very clever technique I described in context of my scrollbar plugin jsFancyScroll:

The scrolled content is actually scrolled natively by the browser scrolling mechanisms while the native scrollbar is hidden by using overflow definitions and the custom scrollbar is kept in sync by bi-directional event listening.

Feel free to use my plugin for your project: :)

https://github.com/leoselig/jsFancyScroll/

I highly recommend it over plugins such as TinyScrollbar that come with terrible performance issues!

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    This seems like not currently maintained, wanted to use it but the Issues on github are open. If this plugin gets updated, let us know.
    – Ethan
    Mar 5, 2015 at 0:20
  • @Ethan I would like to know as well, but to be fair, the open issues are pretty lame
    – Pakman
    Mar 24, 2015 at 16:17
  • @Pakman True, and not being maintained is mostly not good for future, we will have to drop that for an alternative sometime.
    – Ethan
    Mar 24, 2015 at 17:02
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    Sorry for the late answer, project is indeed no longer maintained
    – Leo Selig
    Mar 25, 2015 at 16:36
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If you're looking for a Facebook like scroll bar, then I'd highly recommend you take a look at this one:

http://rocha.la/jQuery-slimScroll

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    400 lines of code for such simple thing is not "slim" ;)
    – vsync
    Apr 26, 2015 at 22:46
  • @vsync Try to get the same features and browser support with significantly less loc and I'm pretty sure the open-source community will appreciate it a lot! ;)
    – Mahdi
    Apr 27, 2015 at 5:25
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    @Mahdi - I did it in 100 lines (4kb) while also making it perform much better. slimScroll is not letting you middle-click the mouse and scroll - a huge accessibility turn-off. yaireo.github.io/fakescroll
    – vsync
    Apr 27, 2015 at 7:40
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    @Mahdi - Thanks! you can check my github, there are many other nice projects there
    – vsync
    Apr 28, 2015 at 17:31
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    @DragosPodaru - IE has many versions. which exactly? personally I haven't been developing for IE for years now..
    – vsync
    Jan 26, 2017 at 14:23
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I solved this problem by adding another div as a sibling to the scrolling content div. It's height is set to the radius of the curved borders. There will be design issues if you have content that you want nudged to the very bottom, or text you want to flow into this new div, etc,. but for my UI this thin div is no problem.

The real trick is to have the following structure:

<div class="window">
 <div class="title">Some title text</div>
 <div class="content">Main content area</div>
 <div class="footer"></div>
</div>

Important CSS highlights:

  • Your CSS would define the content region with a height and overflow to allow the scrollbar(s) to appear.
  • The window class gets the same diameter corners as the title and footer
  • The drop shadow, if desired, is only given to the window class
  • The height of the footer div is the same as the radius of the bottom corners

Here's what that looks like:

Bottom right corner

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