I've got a menu with scrollspy (using twitter boostrap). I want update the window.location.hash
when the user scrolls down to a next section.
The following code works when the user scrolls down:
$(window).on('activate.bs.scrollspy', function (e) {
location.hash = $("a[href^='#']", e.target).attr("href") || location.hash;
});
However it does not work very well when the user scrolls upwards.
The reason for this is that setting a new location.hash
triggers the browser to navigate towards that respective anchor. That triggers a chain reaction in which the user will instantly end up at the top of the page.
Now what would be the simplest way to solve that problem?
It is possible to change the state of the URL with HTML5 history, without triggering the browser to follow the new state. This is not supported by all browsers.
Using
history.replaceState()
has the additional benefit that when the user uses the back button of the browser it will not just scroll up first.See working js-fiddle.
I use this for Bootstrap v4:
For more cross-browser hash update you can use this JS:
It removes temporarily the searched hash than adds it via the
window.location
and then restores hash in question. Unfortunately I don't know the exact compatibility range for this solution but IE9 is supported for sure and probably all older versions on IE as well (I don't care about older browsers in my projects so I didn't test this solution).