I have a div
layer with overflow
set to scroll
.
When scrolled to the bottom of the div
, I wanna run a function.
I have a div
layer with overflow
set to scroll
.
When scrolled to the bottom of the div
, I wanna run a function.
The accepted answer was fundamentally flawed, it has since been deleted. The correct answer is:
function scrolled(e) {
if (myDiv.offsetHeight + myDiv.scrollTop >= myDiv.scrollHeight) {
scrolledToBottom(e);
}
}
Tested this in Firefox, Chrome and Opera. It works.
I could not get either of the above answers to work so here is a third option that works for me! (This is used with jQuery)
if (($(window).innerHeight() + $(window).scrollTop()) >= $("body").height()) {
//do stuff
}
Hope this helps anyone!
OK Here is a Good And Proper Solution
You have a Div call with an id="myDiv"
so the function goes.
function GetScrollerEndPoint()
{
var scrollHeight = $("#myDiv").prop('scrollHeight');
var divHeight = $("#myDiv").height();
var scrollerEndPoint = scrollHeight - divHeight;
var divScrollerTop = $("#myDiv").scrollTop();
if(divScrollerTop === scrollerEndPoint)
{
//Your Code
//The Div scroller has reached the bottom
}
}
This worked for me:
$(window).scroll(function() {
buffer = 40 // # of pixels from bottom of scroll to fire your function. Can be 0
if ($(".myDiv").prop('scrollHeight') - $(".myDiv").scrollTop() <= $(".myDiv").height() + buffer ) {
doThing();
}
});
Must use jQuery 1.6 or higher
I found an alternative that works.
None of these answers worked for me (currently testing in FireFox 22.0), and after a lot of research I found, what seems to be, a much cleaner and straight forward solution.
Implemented solution:
function IsScrollbarAtBottom() {
var documentHeight = $(document).height();
var scrollDifference = $(window).height() + $(window).scrollTop();
return (documentHeight == scrollDifference);
}
Resource: http://jquery.10927.n7.nabble.com/How-can-we-find-out-scrollbar-position-has-reached-at-the-bottom-in-js-td145336.html
Regards
I created a event based solution based on Bjorn Tipling's answer:
(function(doc){
'use strict';
window.onscroll = function (event) {
if (isEndOfElement(doc.body)){
sendNewEvent('end-of-page-reached');
}
};
function isEndOfElement(element){
//visible height + pixel scrolled = total height
return element.offsetHeight + element.scrollTop >= element.scrollHeight;
}
function sendNewEvent(eventName){
var event = doc.createEvent('Event');
event.initEvent(eventName, true, true);
doc.dispatchEvent(event);
}
}(document));
And you use the event like this:
document.addEventListener('end-of-page-reached', function(){
console.log('you reached the end of the page');
});
BTW: you need to add this CSS for javascript to know how long the page is
html, body {
height: 100%;
}
Demo: http://plnkr.co/edit/CCokKfB16iWIMddtWjPC?p=preview
Take a look at this example: MDN Element.scrollHeight
I recommend that check out this example: stackoverflow.com/a/24815216... which implements a cross-browser handling for the scroll action.
You may use the following snippet:
//attaches the "scroll" event
$(window).scroll(function (e) {
var target = e.currentTarget,
scrollTop = target.scrollTop || window.pageYOffset,
scrollHeight = target.scrollHeight || document.body.scrollHeight;
if (scrollHeight - scrollTop === $(target).innerHeight()) {
console.log("► End of scroll");
}
});
Since innerHeight
doesn't work in some old IE versions, clientHeight
can be used:
$(window).scroll(function (e){
var body = document.body;
//alert (body.clientHeight);
var scrollTop = this.pageYOffset || body.scrollTop;
if (body.scrollHeight - scrollTop === parseFloat(body.clientHeight)) {
loadMoreNews();
}
});