How to determine scroll direction without actually

2019-01-22 03:03发布

问题:

I am coding a page where the first time the user scrolls, it doesn't actually scroll the page down, instead it adds a class with a transition. I'd like to detect when the user is scrolling down, because if he scrolls up, I want it to do something else. All the methods that I've found are based on defining the current body ScrollTop, and then comparing with the body scrollTop after the page scrolls, defining the direction, but since the page doesn't actually scroll, the body scrollTop() doesn't change.

animationIsDone = false;

function preventScroll(e) {

    e.preventDefault();
    e.stopPropagation();
}

$('body').on('mousewheel', function(e) {

    if (animationIsDone === false) {
        $("#main-header").removeClass("yellow-overlay").addClass("yellow-overlay-darker");
        $(".site-info").first().addClass("is-description-visible");
        preventScroll(e);

        setTimeout(function() {
            animationIsDone = true;
        }, 1000);

    }


});

This is what I have come with, but that way it doesn't matter the direction I scroll it triggers the event

回答1:

The mousewheel event is quickly becoming obsolete. You should use wheel instead.

This would also easily allow you to the vertical and/or horizontal scroll direction without scroll bars.

This event has support in all current major browsers and should remain the standard far into the future.

Here is a demo:

window.addEventListener('wheel', function(e) {
  if (e.deltaY < 0) {
    console.log('scrolling up');
    document.getElementById('status').innerHTML = 'scrolling up';
  }
  if (e.deltaY > 0) {
    console.log('scrolling down');
    document.getElementById('status').innerHTML = 'scrolling down';
  }
});
<div id="status"></div>



回答2:

Try This using addEventListener.

window.addEventListener('mousewheel', function(e){
    wDelta = e.wheelDelta < 0 ? 'down' : 'up';
    console.log(wDelta);
});

Demo

Update:

As mentioned in one of the answers, the mousewheel event is depreciated. You should use the wheel event instead.



回答3:

Try using e.wheelDelta

var animationIsDone = false, scrollDirection = 0;

function preventScroll(e) {

    e.preventDefault();
    e.stopPropagation();
}

$('body').on('mousewheel', function(e) {

    if (e.wheelDelta >= 0) {
        console.log('Scroll up'); //your scroll data here
    }
    else {
        console.log('Scroll down'); //your scroll data here
    }
    if (animationIsDone === false) {
        $("#main-header").removeClass("yellow-overlay").addClass("yellow-overlay-darker");
        $(".site-info").first().addClass("is-description-visible");
        preventScroll(e);

        setTimeout(function() {
            animationIsDone = true;
        }, 1000);

    }


});

Note: remember that MouseWheel is deprecated and not supported in FireFox



回答4:

Tested on chrome and

$('body').on('mousewheel', function(e) {

    if (e.originalEvent.deltaY >= 0) {
        console.log('Scroll up'); //your scroll data here
    }
    else {
        console.log('Scroll down'); //your scroll data here
    }

});


回答5:

this one work in react app

<p onWheel={this.onMouseWheel}></p> 

after add event listener, in function u can use deltaY To capture mouse Wheel

onMouseWheel = (e) => {
 e.deltaY > 0 
   ? console.log("Down")
   : console.log("up")
}