I'm building an app (ES6) and I'm curious what is the 'correct' way to catch scroll up / down events?
I tried (npm) installing react-scroll-listener but I couldn't get it to work with my ES6 class.
Basically I want: if scroll up, do this; if scroll down, do something else.
import React from 'react';
import config from '../config';
import StaticImageList from '../Common/StaticImageList';
import ScrollListener from 'react-scroll-listener';
class Album extends React.Component {
constructor(props){
super(props);
}
myScrollStartHandler(){
console.log('Scroll start');
}
myScrollEndHandler(){
console.log('Scroll end 300ms(default)');
}
componentDidMount(){
scrollListener.addScrollHandler('body', myScrollStartHandler, myScrollEndHandler );
}
render(){
return <StaticImageList />;
}
};
export default Album;
This is general advice for hooking into any listeners:
Attach stuff in componentDidMount
, unattach in componentWillUnmount
class Whatever extends Component {
componentDidMount() {
window.addEventListener('scroll', this.handleScroll, { passive: true })
}
componentWillUnmount() {
window.removeEventListener('scroll', this.handleScroll)
}
handleScroll(event) {
// do something like call `this.setState`
// access window.scrollY etc
}
}
Actually there are many ways to do it, but using React hooks was the easier one for me, all you need to do is:
- define a state for scroll position
- a function to update your scroll position state
- start a scroll listen when component mounts
- stop the listen when component unmount
Something like:
import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
...
// inside component:
const [scrollPosition, setSrollPosition] = useState(0);
const handleScroll = () => {
const position = window.pageYOffset;
setSrollPosition(position);
};
useEffect(() => {
window.addEventListener('scroll', handleScroll, { passive: true });
return () => {
window.removeEventListener('scroll', handleScroll);
};
}, []);
Now you have scrollPosition in pixels to work on
In this particular case useEffect will be equivalent to componentDidMount because it will be fired once the component mounts, but also after all updates, but addEventListener
is smart enough to not start duplicated listeners.
The return inside of useEffect is equivalent to componentWillUnmount, it'll "called" when the component unmounts.