Research
Security News
Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
@phanmn/plain-draggable
Advanced tools
The simple and high performance library to allow HTML/SVG element to be dragged.
The simple and high performance library to allow HTML/SVG element to be dragged.
Document and Examples https://anseki.github.io/plain-draggable/
Features:
requestAnimationFrame
API, translate
and will-change
CSS if possible, for high performance.Load PlainDraggable into your web page.
<script src="plain-draggable.min.js"></script>
This is simplest case:
draggable = new PlainDraggable(element);
Now, the element
can be moved by mouse-dragging (or touch interfaces) operation.
The element
might be a <div>
, <span>
, <circle>
or something.
By default, the moving is restricted to inside of the element
's parent element.
<div style="background-color: gray;">
<div id="draggable">Drag This</div>
</div>
The <div id="draggable">
can be moved within the gray box. (See containment
option.)
You can specify a "Grid" that the draggable element snaps to.
draggable.snap = {step: 30};
For options, methods and more details, refer to the following.
draggable = new PlainDraggable(element[, options])
The element
argument is a HTML or SVG element that will be a draggable element. Any element that has a bounding-box is accepted. Other elements such as <g>
can not be specified.
The options
argument is an Object that can have properties as options (and leftTop
option). You can also change the options by setOptions
method or properties of the PlainDraggable instance.
leftTop
optionBy default, PlainDraggable tries to move the draggable element by using the translate
CSS transform function.
If true
is specified for leftTop
option of the constructor, it uses the left
and top
CSS properties instead. You may use this to make it synchronize with the layout of something.
Note that the left
and top
CSS properties may be performance degradation.
Also, this is an option for constructor, that is, you can not change this after.
setOptions
self = draggable.setOptions(options)
Set one or more options.
The options
argument is an Object that can have properties as options.
position
self = draggable.position()
Re-calculate the position of the draggable element, containment
option, snap
option and autoScroll
option, with current layout of a page.
Those are re-calculated as needed automatically when a window is resized, or a window or something is scrolled.
You should call position
method if you changed the layout without resizing the window or scrolling something.
remove
draggable.remove()
Remove the current PlainDraggable instance.
Never use the removed instance.
containment
Type: HTML/SVG element or Rect
Default: Parent element
A rectangle that restricts the moving of the draggable element. The draggable element can not move to the outside of this rectangle even if a mouse pointer is moved to there.
It can be a HTML or SVG element, or a Rect
object like {left: '10%', top: 20, right: '90%', height: 300}
(See Rect
). The base of the Rect
object is the current document.
Note that the rectangle is "padding-box" of the element if an element is specified. That is, it is the inside of borders of the element.
The width or height can be less than the size of the draggable element, such as zero, to disable the moving on that axis.
For example, this draggable element can be moved in a horizontal direction only.
draggable.containment = {left: 20, top: 20, width: 800, height: 0};
// See next code too.
When the moving on an axis is disabled, the draggable element is not moved in that axis direction at all. Therefore the position of the containment
on that axis has no meaning.
For example, when 0
is specified for height
to disable the moving on that Y-axis, even if 0
, 999
or another value is specified for top
, the draggable element is not moved to 0
or 999
in Y-axis.
Therefore the above example code can be replaced with:
draggable.containment = {left: 20, top: 0, width: 800, height: 0};
// The element is not moved to `top: 0` even if it is positioned at `top: 480` now.
The default is the draggable element's parent element.
You can specify a <body>
element that means all of a page, or {left: 0, top: 0, width: '100%', height: '100%'}
means all of a document (the document height might differ from the <body>
height).
snap
Type: number, string, HTML/SVG element, Rect
, Array, Object or undefined
Default: undefined
See Snap.
autoScroll
Type: boolean, window, HTML element, Object or undefined
Default: undefined
Scroll a scrollable area when the draggable element is moved to near the edges of the area. The scrollable area can be the current window or a HTML element.
For example:
draggable.autoScroll = true;
If true
is specified, the autoScroll
is enabled with all default options.
If a HTML element is specified, it is enabled with {target: element}
option.
Or, you can specify an Object that can have properties as following options.
target
Type: window or HTML element
Default: window
A scrollable area. Maybe, that contains the containment
or that is the containment
itself.
speed
Type: number or Array
Default: [40, 200, 1000]
A number determining the speed of scrolling, pixels per second.
You can specify an Array that contains multiple values. Then, scroll it with the first speed when the draggable element was moved near the edges of the area, and scroll it with the next speed when the draggable element was moved near more..., in this way. At most, you can specify three numbers.
Those must be sorted in ascending order.
See sensitivity
option for lines of demarcation that switch the speed.
sensitivity
Type: number or Array
Default: [100, 40, 0]
A number determining the starting or switching the speed, the distance from the edge of the area, in pixels.
When you specify multiple values for speed
option, you can specify an Array that contains multiple values. Then, scroll it with the first speed when the draggable element was moved at less than the first distance from the edges of the area, and scroll it with the next speed when the draggable element was moved at less than the next distance..., in this way. At most, you can specify three numbers.
Those must be sorted in descending order.
See speed
option for the speed.
minX
/ maxX
/ minY
/ maxY
Type: number or undefined
Default: undefined
A number setting a limit to scrolling. These values are returned value by pageXOffset
, pageYOffset
, scrollLeft
or scrollTop
.
You can specify 0
for maxX
or maxY
to disable scrolling for that axis only. For example, maxX: 0
disables horizontal scrolling only.
Note that this is a limit of the autoScroll
, not scrolling of UI. That is, user can scroll manually, regardless of this.
handle
Type: HTML/SVG element
Default: Draggable element
A part element of the draggable element that receives mouse (or touch interfaces) operations. A user seizes and drags this element to move the draggable element.
The default is the draggable element itself, and all of the draggable element can be seized and dragged.
zIndex
Type: number or boolean
Default: 9000
A z-index
CSS property that is applied to the draggable element when it is being dragged. It is restored when the dragging finished.
If false
is specified, it is not changed.
left
/ top
Type: number or undefined
Default: undefined
The distance between a left or top edge of the draggable element and a left or top edge of the document, in pixels.
It can be used for initial position when constructing new PlainDraggable instance. Also, it can be used to move the draggable element after constructing.
For example, move it rightward:
draggable.left += 10;
onDrag
Type: function or undefined
Default: undefined
A function that is called when the draggable element was dragged. That is not moved yet.
It is called even if the draggable element is not moved because containment
or snap
avoided the moving. Use onMove
if you want to do something when the draggable element was moved.
In the function, this
refers to the current PlainDraggable instance.
An Object that has left
and top
properties as new position is passed to the function. These are numbers that were calculated the same as left
/ top
options.
It is new position that the draggable element is about to go to. Therefore it might differ from a position of a mouse pointer. And also, you can change these properties.
For example:
draggable.onDrag = function(newPosition) {
if (newPosition.left > this.rect.left) {
newPosition.left = this.rect.left + 48; // Move it 48px to the right forcibly.
}
};
Also, snapped
property is true
if the position was determined by the draggable element being snapped (See Snap).
If the function returns false
, the moving is canceled.
For example:
draggable.onDrag = function(newPosition) {
return !!newPosition.snapped; // It is moved only when it is snapped.
};
// The `gravity` option also can be used for the same purpose.
onMove
Type: function or undefined
Default: undefined
A function that is called when the draggable element was moved.
It is not called when the draggable element is not moved because containment
or snap
avoided the moving even if the draggable element is dragged.
In the function, this
refers to the current PlainDraggable instance.
An Object that has left
and top
properties is passed to the function. It might have snapped
property too. See onDrag
for those properties.
And also, autoScroll
property is true
if it tried scroll (See autoScroll
option). This means that the draggable element was moved to near the edges of the area, it might have been not scrolled.
For example:
draggable.onMove = function(newPosition) {
console.log('left: %d top: %d width: %d height: %d it is scrolling: %s'
// determined position that was changed by snap and onDrag
newPosition.left, newPosition.top,
this.rect.width, this.rect.height,
newPosition.autoScroll);
};
onDragStart
Type: function or undefined
Default: undefined
A function that is called when a mouse button or touch interface was pressed on the draggable element. That is not dragged yet.
It is called even if the draggable element is not dragged. Use onDrag
if you want to do something when the draggable element was dragged.
In the function, this
refers to the current PlainDraggable instance.
An Object that has clientX
and clientY
properties pointing a position of a mouse pointer or touch interface is passed to the function. That might be MouseEvent
or first Touch
object of TouchEvent
.
If the function returns false
, the dragging is canceled.
For example:
draggable.onDragStart = function(pointerXY) {
if (isEar(pointerXY)) {
alert('Do not pull my ear!!');
return false;
}
return true;
};
onMoveStart
Type: function or undefined
Default: undefined
A function that is called when the moving the draggable element started.
It is not called until the draggable element is moved even if it was dragged, and it is called at most once, while a mouse button is being pressed.
In the function, this
refers to the current PlainDraggable instance.
An Object that has left
and top
properties is passed to the function. It might have snapped
and autoScroll
properties too. See onMove
for those properties.
onDragEnd
Type: function or undefined
Default: undefined
A function that is called when a mouse button was released.
It is called even if the mouse pointer was not moved.
In the function, this
refers to the current PlainDraggable instance.
An Object that has left
and top
properties is passed to the function. See onDrag
for those properties.
disabled
Type: boolean
Default: false
If true
is specified, the draggable element stops the moving immediately, and it does not receive mouse operations.
element
Read-only
Type: HTML/SVG element
The element that was passed to constructor.
rect
Read-only
Type: Rect
A Rect
object to indicate current position and size of the draggable element.
The base of the Rect
object is the current document.
Properties with the same name as each option to get or set following options:
For example:
draggable.containment = wideArea;
draggable.handle = newHandle;
draggable.left += 10;
You can use setOptions
method instead to set multiple options.
PlainDraggable.draggableCursor
/ PlainDraggable.draggingCursor
Static Property
Type: string or Array
Default: (depend on web browser)
PlainDraggable.draggableCursor
: ['grab', 'all-scroll', 'move']
or ['all-scroll', 'move']
(For Webkit)PlainDraggable.draggingCursor
: ['grabbing', 'move']
or 'move'
(For Webkit)PlainDraggable.draggableCursor
is a cursor
CSS property that is applied to the handle
element.
PlainDraggable.draggingCursor
is a cursor
CSS property that is applied to the handle
element while a mouse button is being pressed.
If an Array that contains multiple values is specified, PlainDraggable tries it with each value until any of them succeeded.
Note that the allowed values of the cursor
CSS property depend on each web browser. And also, Webkit has a bug about the cursor
CSS property, and the bug is being ignored a long time.
If false
is specified, it is not changed.
If false
is specified for both PlainDraggable.draggableCursor
and PlainDraggable.draggingCursor
, PlainDraggable does nothing to a cursor
CSS property.
PlainDraggable.draggableClass
/ PlainDraggable.draggingClass
/ PlainDraggable.movingClass
Static Property
Type: string
Default:
PlainDraggable.draggableClass
: 'plain-draggable'
PlainDraggable.draggingClass
: 'plain-draggable-dragging'
PlainDraggable.movingClass
: 'plain-draggable-moving'
PlainDraggable.draggableClass
is a class name that is added to the draggable element.
PlainDraggable.draggingClass
is a class name that is added to the draggable element within the period from when a mouse button is pressed until the button is released. Then, the draggable element has both classes.
PlainDraggable.movingClass
is a class name that is added to the draggable element within the period from when the draggable element starts moving until a mouse button is released. Then, the draggable element has three classes.
For example:
PlainDraggable.draggableClass = 'cat';
PlainDraggable.draggingClass = 'lift';
PlainDraggable.movingClass = 'swing';
Rect
An Object to indicate a position and size of a rectangle, like DOMRect
.
It has following properties:
left
or x
top
or y
width
or right
height
or bottom
Also, it is relative to a "base".
The left
/ top
/ right
/ bottom
indicate distance between the left or top edge of the base and the left or top side of the rectangle. Note that right
/ bottom
also indicate distance from the left or top edge of the base, not from the right or bottom edge.
The x
is an alias for left
, and the y
is an alias for top
.
The width
/ height
indicate a size of the rectangle. The width
is required if right
is not specified, and the height
is required if bottom
is not specified.
All values are a number as pixels or string as percentage (e.g. '30%'
).
The "base" determines the origin of coordinates, and the number of pixels of 100%
.
Rect
object is specified for the containment
option, the base is the current document.Rect
object is specified for the snap
option, the base is determined by base
option.Rect
object is got by the rect
property, the base is the current document.Note that the right
must be greater than or equal to left
, and the bottom
must be greater than or equal to top
. In other words, the width
and height
can not be negative value. PlainDraggable does not invert these to avoid behavior that you don't want. For example, {left: 400, right: '50%'}
is ignored when the base is resized to smaller than 800px
width.
For example, when the base width is 600px
and height is 400px
:
{left: 20, top: '10%', width: '50%', bottom: 390}
indicates a rectangle that is left: 20px; top: 40px; width: 300px; height: 350px;
, positioned relative to the top-left corner of the base.{left: '50%', top: 0, width: '50%', height: '100%'}
indicates a rectangle that is the right half of the base.{left: '10%', top: '10%', right: '90%', bottom: '90%'}
indicates a rectangle that has 10%
margin at all sides.You can specify snap
option.
The snap
option makes one or more "snap-targets". The draggable element gravitates toward a snap-target when it is moved to near the snap-target, and it sticks to the snap-target.
Each snap-target can be one of the following:
Rect
objectThe point acts on both a horizontal direction and a vertical direction, and the line acts on either direction.
The point and line are the basic of snap-target. The element and Rect
object create multiple lines.
Single value creates a point that the value indicates both X and Y coordinates of the point. Then a top-left corner (default) of the draggable element snaps to this point.
This is simplest case.
draggable.snap = 60; // Point (X: 60px, Y: 60px)
A value as coordinate is a number as pixels or string as percentage (e.g. '30%'
). The percentage is calculated the same as the x
and y
of Rect
.
For example, this indicates the center of the base.
draggable.snap = '50%'; // Point (X: 50%, Y: 50%) i.e. the center
An Object that has x
and y
properties creates a point that the properties indicate coordinates of the point.
draggable.snap = {x: 160, y: '40%'}; // Point (X: 160px, Y: 40%)
That is, a value that does not have both x
and y
is considered as a point that the value indicates the same value for the x
and y
. For example, 30
is considered as {x: 30, y: 30}
.
An Object that has either one of x
and y
properties creates a line that the property indicates a coordinate on the axis. Then two sides (default) of the draggable element along a direction of this line snap to this line.
draggable.snap = {x: 130}; // Vertical Line (from top edge to bottom edge)
By default, the line has full length of size of the base.
The other property can be an Object that has one or both of start
and end
properties that indicate a coordinate on the axis. This Object indicates the range on the axis for the line.
draggable.snap = {x: 130, y: {start: 5, end: '50%'}}; // Vertical Line
Note that the end
must be greater than or equal to start
. PlainDraggable does not invert these to avoid behavior that you don't want. For example, x: {start: 400, end: '50%'}
is ignored when the base is resized to smaller than 800px
width.
A step
property of the Object copies the point or line repeatedly at specified intervals. This may be called "Grid". It can be also grid on only either one of X and Y axis.
Its value is a number as pixels or string as percentage (e.g. '30%'
). The percentage is calculated the same as the width
or height
of Rect
.
// Consecutive Points at 40px intervals, on X and Y
draggable.snap = {step: 40};
// As previously mentioned, this is considered as {x: {step: 40}, y: {step: 40}}.
// Consecutive Points at X: 10px and Y: 20px intervals
draggable.snap = {x: {step: 10}, y: {step: 20}};
// Consecutive Horizontal Lines at 25% intervals (from left edge to right edge)
draggable.snap = {y: {step: '25%'}};
// 4 Consecutive Horizontal Lines (from left edge to right edge)
draggable.snap = {y: {step: '20%', end: '60%'}};
// 4 Consecutive Horizontal Lines (300px length)
draggable.snap = {x: {end: 300}, y: {step: '20%', end: '60%'}};
An element or a Rect
object creates four lines that overlap with edges of its rectangle.
draggable.snap = document.getElementById('snap-box'); // Element
draggable.snap = {left: '10%', top: 0, width: '80%', height: 280}; // Rect object
The base of the Rect
object is determined by base
option.
You can specify options for the snap-target via properties of the Object that is passed to the snap
option, or an Object instead of something that is not Object. For example, you can specify {x: 80, y: 80, gravity: 30}
instead of 80
to specify the gravity
option.
Also, you can specify an Array that contains multiple snap-targets.
For options and more details, refer to the following.
Actually, you saw shortened structure of a snap
option in the above.
Its basic structure is here:
SnapOptions
:
{
targets: [snapTarget1, snapTarget2...], // Array containing `SnapTarget`s
// Common options for all `SnapTarget`s in the `targets`
option1: optionValue1,
option2: optionValue2,
:
}
SnapTarget
:
{
x: xValue, // number, string or Object
y: yValue,
boundingBox: elementOrRect, // Element or Rect object
// Options for this `SnapTarget`, that override each common option
option1: optionValue1,
option2: optionValue2,
:
}
The x
and y
can be one of the following:
start
and end
properties that are each coordinate on the axis.step
property that is interval between repeated coordinates. It can have start
and end
properties as a range.All these values are a number as pixels or a string as percentage (e.g. '30%'
). The step
as percentage is calculated the same as the width
or height
of Rect
, and the other values as percentage are calculated the same as the x
or y
of that.
The combination of the x
and y
determines what the SnapTarget
indicates.
x
and y
indicate each coordinate, this SnapTarget
indicates a point.x
and y
indicates a coordinate and the other indicates a range, this SnapTarget
indicates a line.x
and y
indicates a coordinate and the other indicates repeated coordinates, this SnapTarget
indicates consecutive points arranged linearly.x
and y
indicate repeated coordinates, this SnapTarget
indicates consecutive points arranged in the horizontal and vertical directions.x
and y
indicates a range and the other indicates repeated coordinates, this SnapTarget
indicates consecutive parallel lines.x
and y
indicate each range, this SnapTarget
indicates four lines as a rectangle. Unlike boundingBox
, edge
option is not applied.An important point, the default for the x
and y
is a range, and the default for the start
is 0
, and the default for the end
is '100%'
.
Therefore, you can specify either one of the x
and y
to indicate a line. For example, {y: 30}
indicates a horizontal line. The x
having either one or both of the start
and end
is required only when the line should be shortened.
Also, you can specify only the step
to indicate consecutive points or consecutive lines. For example, {y: {step: 50}}
indicates consecutive horizontal lines.
The boundingBox
is used instead of the x
and y
, to indicate a rectangle.
You can specify an element or Rect
object, then this SnapTarget
indicates four lines that overlap with edges of its rectangle.
You can specify one or more SnapTarget
s for the targets
Array of SnapOptions
.
And you can specify one or more options in both SnapTarget
and SnapOptions
. The options in SnapTarget
override each option in SnapOptions
.
For example:
draggable.snap = {
targets: [
{x: 100},
{x: 200, gravity: 60},
{x: 300}
],
gravity: 50,
center: true
};
A 50
is applied to the gravity
option of first and third snap-targets.
A 60
is applied to the gravity
option of second snap-target only.
A true
is applied to the center
option of all three snap-targets.
As above, you can specify the snap
option in detail. Or, you can also specify it simply as follows.
You can specify something for the SnapTarget
directly. It is considered as both x
and y
, or boundingBox
.
For example, the following two codes work same:
draggable.snap = {
targets: [
100,
document.getElementById('snap-box'),
{x: 20, y: 0, width: 400, height: 200}
]
};
draggable.snap = {
targets: [
{x: 100, y: 100},
{boundingBox: document.getElementById('snap-box')},
{boundingBox: {x: 20, y: 0, width: 400, height: 200}}
]
};
You can specify single SnapTarget
for the targets
directly instead of an Array.
For example:
draggable.snap = {
targets: 100 // The same as [100] and [{x: 100, y: 100}]
};
You can specify the targets
for the SnapOptions
directly.
For example:
draggable.snap = 100;
// The same as {targets: 100} and {targets: [100]} and {targets: [{x: 100, y: 100}]}
draggable.snap = [100, {x: 200, gravity: 60}]; // 2 targets
These are specified in the SnapOptions
and SnapTarget
.
gravity
Type: number
Default: 20
Distance from the draggable element, in pixels.
The draggable element gravitates toward the snap-target when the distance becomes less than or equal to this.
To avoid staying between "repeated coordinates", you can specify a number greater than or equal to the half of the step
. Or, onDrag
option also can be used for the same purpose.
corner
For snap-target as point
Type: string
Default: 'tl'
One or more corners of the draggable element that gravitate toward the snap-target.
It is a value that indicates a corner or a list of the values separated by space or comma.
Allowed values are:
'top-left'
(Alias: 'tl'
, 'left-top'
, 'lt'
)'top-right'
(Alias: 'tr'
, 'right-top'
, 'rt'
)'bottom-left'
(Alias: 'bl'
, 'left-bottom'
, 'lb'
)'bottom-right'
(Alias: 'br'
, 'right-bottom'
, 'rb'
)'all'
(The same as 'tl tr bl br'
)side
For snap-target as line
Type: string
Default: 'both'
One or more sides of the draggable element that gravitate toward the snap-target.
It is a value that indicates a side or a list of the values separated by space or comma.
Allowed values are:
'start'
: Indicate a left side of the draggable element if the snap-target is vertical line, otherwise a top side.'end'
: Indicate a right side of the draggable element if the snap-target is vertical line, otherwise a bottom side.'both'
(The same as 'start end'
)center
For snap-target as point or line
Type: boolean
Default: false
If true
is specified, the center of the draggable element gravitates toward the snap-target. The corner
and side
options are ignored.
edge
For snap-target as element or Rect
object
Type: string
Default: 'both'
One or more sides of each edge of the rectangle that the draggable element gravitates toward. The rectangle is that of the element or Rect
object that is specified for the boundingBox
.
It is a value that indicates a side or a list of the values separated by space or comma.
Allowed values are:
'inside'
'outside'
'both'
(The same as 'inside outside'
)base
Type: string
Default: 'containment'
A base for the Rect
object. The x
and y
also are relative to this.
Allowed values are:
'containment'
: Indicate the element or Rect
object that is specified for the containment
option.'document'
: Indicate the current document.FAQs
The simple and high performance library to allow HTML/SVG element to be dragged.
The npm package @phanmn/plain-draggable receives a total of 5 weekly downloads. As such, @phanmn/plain-draggable popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @phanmn/plain-draggable demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.