o-viewport
Utility for attaching debounced listeners to resize, scroll, orientation and visibility events on window
.
Usage
Check out how to include Origami components in your project to get started with o-viewport
.
Note: within the component's API and in the documentation below orientation
and visibility
are used instead of orientationchange
or visibilitychange
, but the actual browser event listened to is orientationchange
or visibilitychange
Methods
o-viewport#listenTo(eventType)
Attaches a debounced/throttled (as appropriate) listener to events on window [resize
, scroll
, orientation
, visibility
or all
] which in turn fires events within the oViewport
namespace (see Events below).
Note: all will enable all o-viewport events.
import oViewport from '@financial-times/o-viewport';
oViewport.listenTo('orientation');
document.body.addEventListener('oViewport.orientation', function(event) {
console.log(event.type);
console.log(event.viewport);
console.log(event.orientation);
console.log(event.originalEvent);
});
See events for more examples.
o-viewport#stopListeningTo(eventType)
Remove the attached listener from the window for the named event [resize
, scroll
, orientation
, visibility
or all
].
Note: all will disable all o-viewport events.
oViewport.stopListeningTo('orientation');
o-viewport#getOrientation()
Provides a reasonably reliable way (more so than window.orientation
) of obtaining the current orientation of the viewport.
oViewport.getOrientation();
o-viewport#getVisibility()
Provides a reasonably reliable way of obtaining the current visibility of the viewport.
oViewport.getVisibility();
o-viewport#getSize(ignoreScrollbars)
Provides a reliable way of obtaining the current dimensions of the browser window. Returns an object with the properties width
and height
.
By default or if no parameters are passed the method will return the size of the viewport inclusive of the scrollbars. However in certain cases (e.g. adverts) you may want to get the size of the viewport without the scroll bars. In such case pass true
to the method in order to ignore the scrollbars.
oViewport.getSize();
oViewport.getSize(true);
o-viewport#getScrollPosition()
Provides a reliable way of obtaining the current scroll position of the viewport. returns an object with the properties width
, height
, left
and top
oViewport.getScrollPosition();
o-viewport#setThrottleInterval(eventType, interval)
Product use only
Sets the debounce/throttle interval for a given event [scroll
, resize
or orientation
].
As a shorthand, calling setThrottleInterval
with 1 - 3 numbers will set the intervals for scroll
, resize
and orientation
in that order e.g. setThrottleInterval(100, undefined, 300)
is equivalent to:
setThrottleInterval('scroll', 100)
setThrottleInterval('resize')
setThrottleInterval('orientation', 300)
setThrottleInterval('visibility', 30)
The default value for each of these is 100ms
o-viewport#debug()
Turns on debug mode (logging event details to the console).
Events
Each of these custom events are fired on document.body
. For each custom event event.detail.originalEvent
contains a reference to the original browser event and event.detail.viewport
the result of o-viewport#getSize()
. For example:
import oViewport from '@financial-times/o-viewport';
oViewport.listenTo('all');
document.body.addEventListener('oViewport.visibility', function(event) {
console.log(event.type);
console.log(event.detail.viewport);
console.log(event.detail.hidden);
});
Note event.detail.hidden
is unique to the oViewport.visibility
event. Additional unique properties for o-viewport
events are detailed below.
oViewport.resize
- No additional properties.
oViewport.orientation
- data.orientation: 'portrait' or 'landscape'
oViewport.visibility
- data.hidden: true or false
oViewport.scroll
- data.scrollLeft: unitless px value of scroll position
- data.scrollTop: unitless px value of scroll position
- data.scrollHeight: unitless px value of scroll height
- data.scrollWidth: unitless px value of scroll width
Throttling
oViewport.resize
, oViewport.orientation
and oViewport.visibility
are debounced i.e. if the native event fires several times in quick succession the custom event will fire only once n
milliseconds after the last event, where n
is the throttle intervaloViewport.scroll
is throttled i.e. if the native scroll
event fires several times in quick succession the custom event will fire at most once every n
milliseconds, where n
is the throttle interval
Use the setThrottleInterval method to customise throttling.
Migration
Licence
Copyright (c) 2016 Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved.
This software is published under the MIT licence.