normalize-scroll-left
v0.2.1
Published
Utility library to determine and normalize Element.scrollLeft behavior
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Normalize Scroll Left for Right-to-Left
This library normalizes the Element.scrollLeft
property when direction is rtl
.
All the hardwork are based on this juqery plugin and this stackoverflow answer.
Since Element.scrollLeft
's behavior with dir="rtl"
is not defined in any spec we use
a feature detection logic to determine the behavior of the current browser.
Types of scrollLeft
(scrollWidth
= 100) (Copied from
here)
Browser | Type | Most Left | Most Right | Initial -------------- | ------------- | --------- | ---------- | ------- WebKit | default | 0 | 100 | 100 Firefox/Opera | negative | -100 | 0 | 0 IE/Edge | reverse | 100 | 0 | 0
Installation
You can install this package with the following command:
npm install normalize-scroll-left
API
This library exposes these methods:
detectScrollType
type ScrollType = 'indeterminate' | 'default' | 'negative' | 'reverse';
function detectScrollType(): ScrollType;
This function returns the scroll type detected, Keep in mind, this function caches the result as it should render a dummy on the DOM (which is expensive). Make sure the first invocation of this function happens after the body is loaded.
note: To support server-side-rendering, it will output indeterminate
if
it detects a non-browser environment.
import { detectScrollType } from 'normalize-scroll-left';
const type = detectScrollType();
The output is not based on the browser, but feature detection:
Browser | Type
-------------- | -------------
WebKit | default
Firefox/Opera | negative
IE/Edge | reverse
Other/Server | indeterminate
getNormalizedScrollLeft
function getNormalizedScrollLeft(element: HTMLElement, direction: 'rtl' | 'ltr'): number;
You can use this method to get the normalized scrollLeft
property of an element.
You should explicitly pass the direction for the following reasons:
- Querying the
getComputedStyle
is expensive and might cause a reflow. - The behavior shouldn't be changed when direction is
ltr
.
The output is NaN
on the server. Otherwise, it will mimic the behavior of
WebKit
as it's the esiest to work with.
import { getNormalizedScrollLeft } from 'normalize-scroll-left';
const element = document.getElementById('my-scrollable-container');
// element.scrollWidth = 100;
const scrollLeft = getNormalizedScrollLeft(element, 'rtl');
// scrollLeft will always be from 0 (Most Left) to 100 (Most Right).
// It will initially be 100, That means the most right.
setNormalizedScrollLeft
function setNormalizedScrollLeft(
element: HTMLElement,
scrollLeft: number,
direction: 'rtl' | 'ltr',
): void;
You can use this method to set the scrollLeft
property of an element as normalized.
You should explicitly pass the direction for the same reasons as getNormalizedScrollLeft
:
For scrollWidth = 100
the argument scrollLeft
must be between 0
and 100
. This
function will automatically convert it into something the current browser understands.
import { setNormalizedScrollLeft } from 'normalize-scroll-left';
const element = document.getElementById('my-scrollable-container');
// element.scrollWidth = 100, element.clientWidth = 20;
setNormalizedScrollLeft(element, 20, 'rtl');
// Will set element.scrollLeft to ...
// 20 in WebKit (chrome)
// -60 in Firefox/Opera
// 60 in IE/Edge
// Does nothing on the server
Typings
The typescript type definitions are also available and are installed via npm.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license.