Simple JavaScript to add a custom CSS class to an HTML element depending on the window's scroll position. One CSS class is added when scrolling below a certain position, and another one is added when scrolling above that position.
Bootstrap v3 has a JavaScript component named Affix. Affix can be used to modify CSS properties of an element when reaching a certain scroll position. The main use case for it is to change positioning of the element when scrolling past the element - i.e. switching from relative to fixed positioning so that the element remains visible when otherwise the user would scroll past it.
With v4 of Bootstrap, the Affix component is dropped in favor of position:sticky
- which can be used to address the above use case. Many modern browsers have native support for it already, and polyfills are available for browsers which do not natively support position:sticky
.
However, there are other scenarios in which Affix could be used to apply custom styles / classes to elements when reaching certain scroll positions. A common example is changing the text color and background of a fixed navigation bar upon scrolling. Initially (when the page is scrolled to the very top), the navigation bar seamlessly integrates into the page - i.e. it is flat, transparent and without any shadow. When scrolling downwards, the navigation bar 'stands out' so that it seems to be hovering above the page. The background (and text) color might change, it might drop shadow, etc.
This scenario is not addressed by position:sticky
- and this is where the small ScrollPos-Styler script comes to the rescue.
Look at the demo to get a better understanding of the effect.
This script is designed to modify attributes OTHER THAN an element's position. It doesn't work well when changing positioning of an element. Switching between position:relative
and position:fixed
is exactly what position:sticky
is designed for, and this script in no viable alternative. Refer to the documentation for details, and use polyfills for older browsers.
Several options are available:
- Download the latest release
- Clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/acch/scrollpos-styler.git
- Install with Bower:
bower install scrollpos-styler
- Install with npm:
npm install scrollpos-styler
Simply import the scrollPosStyler.js
script into your HTML page at the very end of the body element. Then, add the .sps
class to the element(s) which you want to style. Define the two CSS classes .sps--abv
and .sps--blw
and you're all set!
The .sps--abv
class will be added to your element when the window is scrolled above the defined position, and .sps--blw
will be applied when it is scrolled below that position.
The default scroll position to trigger the style is 1px, meaning that as soon as the user starts scrolling the CSS class will be toggled. This can be changed by adding the data-sps-offset
tag in HTML and specifying an offset or by modifying the scrollOffsetY
variable in JavaScript.
You should add the .sps--abv
class to the element in your HTML code already, to avoid any flickering when JavaScript is initially executed.
To style elements which were created after the page was initially loaded (i.e. using JavaScript), a public initialization function is available. Simply run ScrollPosStyler.init()
to add the appropriate class based on the current scroll position. Demo2 shows you this in action.
The following options can be used in ScrollPosStyler.init()
:
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
scrollOffsetY | number | 1 | Default scroll position in px to trigger the style. |
spsClass | string | 'sps' | Classname used to determine which elements to style. |
classAbove | string | 'sps--abv' | Classname added to the elements when the window is scrolled above the defined position. Default is 'sps--abv'. |
classBelow | string | 'sps--blw' | Classname added to the elements when the window is scrolled below the defined position. Default is 'sps--blw'. |
offsetTag | string | 'data-sps-offset' | HTML tag used on the element to specify a scrollOffsetY other than the default. |
None. The script does not require jQuery or other JavaScript libraries. While being designed for Bootstrap, it does not require it.
The script uses Window.requestAnimationFrame()
, as well as Element.classList
. This means that it is supported by fairly modern browsers, only (IE 10+, Firefox 23+, Chrome 24+, Safari 6.1+). I don't plan on supporting older browsers, thus don't plan to implement any workarounds.
If you need to support older browsers then these links may provide valuable information:
- http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/speed/animations/
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/195951/change-an-elements-class-with-javascript
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/classList
The script can be used for more than just styling a static navbar. The following list provides additional usage examples for those seeking some inspiration:
- Demo3 shows how to style relative offsets — thanks to @mamarmite
Copyright 2015 Achim Christ, released under the MIT license.