the question is a bit more complex than the title can describe. I'm trying to make something like this:
There's a one page layout with content sections. Each section is 100vh, some of them are taller. When user scrolls down or swipes an animation occurrs sliding to a next section. When in a taller section user scrolls freely unless at the bounds of the section, then an animation occurrs.
I've come up with an idea that the browser's scrollbar should be something of a controller, that means it should indicate a position value that would be translated by JS to proper animation. I've created a fixed positioned container with the sections over page's body with its height set to the total sections height so the scrollbar indicates proper values.
The problem is I think I don't want the scrollbar to be visible, because it makes a little paradox when dragging it. Also there will be some content sliding in from the side with its own scrollbar. I think I can hide the scrollbar by doing some tricks if the scrollbar is in a div, not window, but it looks like when a fixed container is in a container with a scrollbar the scroll doesn't happen when the mouse is over the fixed container.
So now I'm stuck between having a window scrollbar and not being actually able to scroll over fixed container. I'd appreciate any help so much. Cheers!
some html just for codepen links to work:
<div class="fixed">
<div class="section-container">
<div class="section"><h1>section 1</h1></div>
<div class="section"><h1>section 2</h1></div>
<div class="section"><h1>section 3</h1></div>
</div>
</div>
codepen example with body scroll
codepen example with container scroll
You added scroll before fixed so it doesn't matter if you have scroll or not it is fixed so you cant scroll over fixed area only under.
Related
I'm wondering that is there any way to scroll through fixed element in scrollable content. Here is prepared fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/hbnfd8ts/13/
If I scroll on red box I should be able to scroll, but as you can see nothing happened. If I remove
.scrollable-div{
overflow-y:scroll;
....
and leave default browser scroll it works. Of course I can pass mousewhell event throught fixed content, but I'm wondering about only css way. Anyone had this issue?
I'm not sure if it's not a browser bug
I have a simple position:fixed sidebar out of the way of page elements. The page scrolls fine, but when I mouse over the fixed sidebar, the page can no longer scroll. Could someone explain why this happens? and how to fix this?
This happens because only the part you hover over scrolls. For example if you create an element with "overflow: scroll", when you over over this element, it will scroll and not the whole page. Same thing is happening over here.
I have centered a div on a page for a group project and while the div itself is centered, the websites contents are centered with the scroll bar in mind. What I mean by this is that the web page contents are centered so that the width of the screen is measured without the scroll bars width. So if the monitor was originally 100px wide, it gets read as 100-(scroll bar width) px wide. Unfortunately, this has caused my fixed position div to be a scroll bars width off center from the rest of the site and it looks pretty funky. Any way to fix that? Can't use jquery, can potentially use a little bit of JS.
Here's the link to my site so you can see what I'm talking about. http://51713941.nhd.weebly.com/index.html
Lets see some code.
This can normally be sorted out with css. Margin:auto
You should use the box model concept in css to style and place the content on the site
Again, the question seems rather vague.
I have an overlay that I created with a width of 700px and height of 500px.
The contents of it will be quite long though and so the user will have to be able to scroll up/down within the overlay.
Could I get a suggestion on how to set this up taking into consideration the fact that scroll bars vary in width in each browser?
For example if I add 15px of padding-right to the overlay wrapper, it displays great in Firefox.
The contents will fit perfectly within the div and a horizontal bar will not appear.
However in another browser, the vertical scroll bar may be 20px wide, this would cause the contents to be forced to scroll horizontally, or, if I disable overflow-x, they would be cut off by 5px on the right.
How can I get it so that, no matter the browser, when the vertical scroll bar appears, the width of the overlay wrapper adjusts so that its contents can be displayed perfectly with no horizontal scroll bar?
Overflow property sounds like what you need: overflow:scroll;? But I guess I'm not sure what your concern of the different width of scrollbars is. How is it setup that this is variable?
Or a different look at your problem, put the div with your overlay wrapper inside another div and have the new div have the scroll property, thus making it so the first directly has nothing to do with scroll bars. Ex: [link]
EDIT: Looking at example you provided, do you want something like this? Trick is like I said above putting div around everything, but instead not giving it a width and having it display:inline-block; (display) so it fits the child (but the scroll wheel stays outside of the child).
EDIT 2: Note if you need it to center on screen, you must have another parent div surrounding the inline-block, and have the inline-block text-align:center;. (example)
use max-width and jquery scrollbar plugin jscrollpane.
You can define the scrollbar width and styles for each browser, if the need it.
http://jscrollpane.kelvinluck.com/
I would like an element fixed to the top of the viewport, when the user scrolls down the page it remains at the top of the viewport... easy. If the window is narrower then 960px the horizontal scrollbars appear. If the window is scrolled horizontally I would like the content inside this fixed element to scroll with it.
Please check out the demo, the two green boxes should always line up. Make your window narrow and scroll horiz, notice how they no longer line up.
Is this possible without JavaScript? Should work in IE7+ and not totally break in IE6.
http://www.louiswalch.com/beta/t/_scrolltest4.html
I don’t think you can achieve that without JavaScript.
position: fixed means that the element is positioned relative to the viewport. You want that vertically, but you don’t want it horizontally. I don’t think there’s any way to achieve that in CSS.
You can't have position:fixed on an overflow scrolling content. You need to use JavaScript for this. i answered a similar question using jQuery at Fixed header inside scrolling block where a div is fixed even if content is scrolling by overflow.
Check working example at http://jsfiddle.net/VswxL/3/