Super tiny vanilla JS module to detect swipe direction and trigger custom events accordingly.
npm i touchsweep
or
yarn add touchsweep
import TouchSweep from 'touchsweep';
const area = document.getElementById('swipe-area');
const data = {
value: 1
};
const touchThreshold = 20;
const touchSwipeInstance = new TouchSweep(area, data, touchThreshold);
// Then listen for custom swipe events and do your magic:
area.addEventListener('swipeleft', event => {
// You have swiped left
// Custom event data is located in event.detail
});
area.addEventListener('swiperight', event => {
// You have swiped right
// Custom event data is located in event.detail
});
area.addEventListener('swipedown', event => {
// You have swiped down
// Custom event data is located in event.detail
});
area.addEventListener('swipeup', event => {
// You have swiped up
// Custom event data is located in event.detail
});
area.addEventListener('tap', event => {
// You have tapped
// Custom event data is located in event.detail
});
The module constructor accepts three (3) arguments:
element
: A HTML Element. Default isdocument.body
eventData
: A plain JS object. Default is{}
threshold
: How many pixels to count until an event is fired. Default is 40
TouchSweep provides a minimal API for you to use.
The TouchSwipe
instance exposes two public methods which allow you to add or to remove all event listeners responsible for the module functionality.
This is useful in cases where you want to remove the TouchSwipe
container/area from the DOM and prevent possible memory leaks by removing all event listeners related to this DOM element.
In order to remove all previously attached event listeners:
touchSwipeInstance.unbind();
In order to add all previously removed event listeners:
touchSwipeInstance.bind();
Currently all evergreen browsers are supported.
There is a simple demo illustrating how the TouchSweep library works.
Check it out here
MIT