Skip to content

A simple vanilla JS script to animate scrolling to anchor links.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

michael-picard/smooth-scroll

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Smooth Scroll Build Status

A lightweight script to animate scrolling to anchor links. Smooth Scroll works great with Gumshoe.

Download Smooth Scroll / View the demo

Getting Started

Compiled and production-ready code can be found in the dist directory. The src directory contains development code. Unit tests are located in the test directory.

1. Include Smooth Scroll on your site.

<script src="dist/js/smooth-scroll.js"></script>

2. Add the markup to your HTML.

Turn anchor links into Smooth Scroll links by adding the [data-scroll] data attribute. Give the anchor location an ID just like you normally would.

<a data-scroll href="#bazinga">Anchor Link</a>
...
<span id="bazinga">Bazinga!</span>

3. Initialize Smooth Scroll.

In the footer of your page, after the content, initialize Smooth Scroll. And that's it, you're done. Nice work!

<script>
	smoothScroll.init();
</script>

Installing with Package Managers

You can install Smooth Scroll with your favorite package manager.

  • NPM: npm install cferdinandi/smooth-scroll
  • Bower: bower install https://github.com/cferdinandi/smooth-scroll.git
  • Component: component install cferdinandi/smooth-scroll

Working with the Source Files

If you would prefer, you can work with the development code in the src directory using the included Gulp build system. This compiles, lints, and minifies code, and runs unit tests.

Dependencies

Make sure these are installed first.

Quick Start

  1. In bash/terminal/command line, cd into your project directory.
  2. Run npm install to install required files.
  3. When it's done installing, run one of the task runners to get going:
    • gulp manually compiles files.
    • gulp watch automatically compiles files when changes are made and applies changes using LiveReload.
    • gulp test compiles files and runs unit tests.

Options and Settings

Smooth Scroll includes smart defaults and works right out of the box. But if you want to customize things, it also has a robust API that provides multiple ways for you to adjust the default options and settings.

Global Settings

You can pass options and callbacks into Smooth Scroll through the init() function:

smoothScroll.init({
	selector: '[data-scroll]', // Selector for links (must be a valid CSS selector)
	selectorHeader: '[data-scroll-header]', // Selector for fixed headers (must be a valid CSS selector)
	speed: 500, // Integer. How fast to complete the scroll in milliseconds
	easing: 'easeInOutCubic', // Easing pattern to use
	offset: 0, // Integer. How far to offset the scrolling anchor location in pixels
	updateURL: true, // Boolean. If true, update the URL hash on scroll
	callback: function ( anchor, toggle ) {} // Function to run after scrolling
});

Easing Options

Linear Moves at the same speed from start to finish.

  • Linear

Ease-In Gradually increases in speed.

  • easeInQuad
  • easeInCubic
  • easeInQuart
  • easeInQuint

Ease-In-Out Gradually increases in speed, peaks, and then gradually slows down.

  • easeInOutQuad
  • easeInOutCubic
  • easeInOutQuart
  • easeInOutQuint

Ease-Out Gradually decreases in speed.

  • easeOutQuad
  • easeOutCubic
  • easeOutQuart
  • easeOutQuint

Learn more about the different easing patterns and what they do at easings.net.

Override settings with data attributes

Smooth Scroll also lets you override global settings on a link-by-link basis using the [data-options] data attribute.

<a data-scroll
   data-options='{
					"speed": 500,
					"easing": "easeInOutCubic",
					"offset": 0
				}'
>
	Anchor Link
</a>

Note: You must use valid JSON in order for the data-options feature to work. Does not support the callback method.

Use Smooth Scroll events in your own scripts

You can also call Smooth Scroll's scroll animation events in your own scripts.

animateScroll()

Animate scrolling to an anchor.

smoothScroll.animateScroll(
	anchor, // ID of the anchor to scroll to. ex. '#bazinga'
	toggle, // Node that toggles the animation, OR an integer. ex. document.querySelector('#toggle')
	options // Classes and callbacks. Same options as those passed into the init() function.
);

Example 1

smoothScroll.animateScroll( '#bazinga' );

Example 2

var toggle = document.querySelector('#toggle');
var options = { speed: 1000, easing: 'easeOutCubic' };
smoothScroll.animateScroll( '#bazinga', toggle, options );

Example 3

smoothScroll.animateScroll( 750 );

escapeCharacters()

Escape special characters for use with animateScroll().

var toggle = smoothScroll.escapeCharacters('#1@#%^-');

destroy()

Destroy the current smoothScroll.init(). This is called automatically during the init function to remove any existing initializations.

smoothScroll.destroy();

Fixed Headers

Add a [data-scroll-header] data attribute to fixed headers. Smooth Scroll will automatically offset scroll distances by the header height. If you have multiple fixed headers, add [data-scroll-header] to the last one in the markup.

<nav data-scroll-header>
	...
</nav>

Animating links to other pages

This is an often requested feature, but Smooth Scroll does not include an option to animate scrolling to links on other pages.

You can attempt to implement it using the API, but it's very difficult to prevent the automatic browser jump when the page loads, and anything I've done to work around it results in weird, janky issues, so I've decided to leave this out of the core. Here's a potential workaround...

  1. Do not add the data-scroll attribute to links to other pages. Treat them like normal links, and include your anchor link hash as normal.

    <a href="some-page.html#example">
  2. Add the following script to the footer of your page, after the smoothScroll.init() function.

    <script>
        if ( window.location.hash ) {
        	var hash = smoothScroll.escapeCharacters( window.location.hash ); // Escape the hash
        	var toggle = document.querySelector( 'a[href*="' + hash + '"]' ); // Get the toggle (if one exists)
            var options = {}; // Any custom options you want to use would go here
            smoothScroll.animateScroll( hash, toggle, options );
        }
    </script>

Browser Compatibility

Smooth Scroll works in all modern browsers, and IE 9 and above.

Smooth Scroll is built with modern JavaScript APIs, and uses progressive enhancement. If the JavaScript file fails to load, or if your site is viewed on older and less capable browsers, anchor links will jump the way they normally would. If you need to smooth scrolling for older browsers, download the jQuery version of Smooth Scroll on GitHub.

Known Issues

If the <body> element has been assigned a height of 100% or overflow: hidden, Smooth Scroll is unable to properly calculate page distances and will not scroll to the right location. The <body> element can have a fixed, non-percentage based height (ex. 500px), or a height of auto, and an overflow of visible.

Programatically adding [data-scroll] attributes to all anchor links

Useful if you have anchor links scattered throughout a page, or if you're using WordPress's wp_nav_menu() function. Add this code to your JavaScript:

;(function (window, document, undefined) {

	'use strict';

	// Cut the mustard
	var supports = 'querySelector' in document && 'addEventListener' in window;
	if ( !supports ) return;

	// Get all anchors
	var anchors = document.querySelectorAll( '[href*="#"]' );

	// Add smooth scroll to all anchors
	for ( var i = 0, len = anchors.length; i < len; i++ ) {
		var url = new RegExp( window.location.hostname + window.location.pathname );
		if ( !url.test( anchors[i].href ) ) continue;
		anchors[i].setAttribute( 'data-scroll', true );
	}

	// Initial smooth scroll (add your attributes as desired)
	smoothScroll.init();

})(window, document);

How to Contribute

In lieu of a formal style guide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Please apply fixes to both the development and production code. Don't forget to update the version number, and when applicable, the documentation.

License

The code is available under the MIT License.

About

A simple vanilla JS script to animate scrolling to anchor links.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%