A swup plugin for customizable smooth scrolling.
- Enables acceleration-based smooth scrolling
- Animates scroll position between page visits
- Animates scrolling to anchors
- Define a custom offset for scroll positions
- Emulate scroll target selector
Install the plugin from npm and import it into your bundle.
npm install @swup/scroll-plugin
import SwupScrollPlugin from '@swup/scroll-plugin';
Or include the minified production file from a CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@swup/scroll-plugin@3"></script>
To run this plugin, include an instance in the swup options.
const swup = new Swup({
plugins: [new SwupScrollPlugin()]
});
Scroll Plugin works out of the box for sites where the window
is the main scroll container,
scrolling back up on page visits and restoring the previous position on browser history visits.
If your site has other scroll containers than the window
, like overflowing divs, the plugin will
happily restore their scroll positions as long as you let it know about those containers. You can
either add the attribute [data-swup-scroll-container]
to them or use the
scrollContainers option to configure a custom selector.
On each page navigation, the plugin will reset the scroll position to the top just like the browser would. On backword/forward history visits, it will restore the previous scroll position that was saved right before leaving the page.
You can customize when to reset vs. restore while clicking a link using the shouldResetScrollPosition option. A common use case would be a custom back button: clicking it would normally reset the scoll position to the top while users would expect it to restore the previous scroll position on the page the link points towards.
doScrollingRightAway
defines if swup is supposed to wait for the replace of the page to scroll to the top.
animateScroll
defines whether the scroll animation is enabled or swup simply sets the scroll
without animation instead. Passing true
or false
will enable or disable all scroll animations.
For finer control, you can pass an object:
{
animateScroll: {
betweenPages: true,
samePageWithHash: true,
samePage: true
}
}
💡 We encourage you to respect user preferences when setting the animateScroll
option:
// Using a simple boolean...
{
animateScroll: !window.matchMedia('(prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)').matches
}
// ...or this little monster, with full control over everything:
{
animateScroll: window.matchMedia('(prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)').matches ? false : {
betweenPages: true,
samePageWithHash: true,
samePage: true
}
}
The animation behavior of the scroll animation can be adjusted by setting scrollFriction
and scrollAcceleration
.
Customize how the scroll target is found on the page. Defaults to standard browser behavior (#id
first, a[name]
second).
{
// Use a custom data attribute instead of id
getAnchorElement: (hash) => {
hash = hash.replace('#', '')
return document.querySelector(`[data-scroll-target="${hash}"]`)
}
}
Due to certain limitations of the History API,
the :target
CSS pseudo-class stops
working on sites that push their own history entries, which includes any site using swup. Enabling
this option provides an alternative way of styling the current target element.
Navigating to the URL /index.html#section2
will make the following element the target element:
<section id="section2">Example</section>
To highlight the current target element, use the data-swup-scroll-target
attribute for styling:
[data-swup-scroll-target] {
outline: 5px auto blue;
}
Offset to substract from the final scroll position, to account for fixed headers. Can be either a number or a function that returns the offset.
{
// Number: fixed offset in px
offset: 30,
// Function: calculate offset before scrolling
offset: () => document.querySelector('#header').offsetHeight,
// The scroll target element is passed into the function
offset: target => target.offsetHeight * 2,
}
Customize the selector string used for finding scroll containers other than the window
. See the
Scroll Containers section for an explanation of how the plugin deals with
overflowing containers.
{
// Always restore the scroll position of overflowing tables and sidebars
scrollContainers: '.overflowing-table, .overflowing-sidebar'
}
Callback function that allows customizing the behavior when a link is clicked. Instead of scrolling
back up on page visits, returning false
here will instead restore the previous scroll position
recorded for that page. See Reset vs. restore for an explanation and use cases.
{
// Don't scroll back up for custom back-links, mimicking the browser back button
shouldResetScrollPosition: (link) => !link.matches('.backlink')
}
new SwupScrollPlugin({
doScrollingRightAway: false,
animateScroll: {
betweenPages: true,
samePageWithHash: true,
samePage: true
},
scrollFriction: 0.3,
scrollAcceleration: 0.04,
getAnchorElement: null,
markScrollTarget: false,
offset: 0,
scrollContainers: `[data-swup-scroll-container]`,
shouldResetScrollPosition: (link) => true
});
Scroll Plugin adds the method scrollTo
to the swup instance, which can be used for custom scrolling.
The method accepts a scroll position in pixels and a boolean whether the scroll position should be animated:
// will animate the scroll position of the window to 2000px
swup.scrollTo(2000, true);
The plugin adds two new hooks scroll:start
and scroll:end
:
swup.hooks.on('scroll:start', () => console.log('Swup started scrolling'));
swup.hooks.on('scroll:end', () => console.log('Swup finished scrolling'));
You can overwrite the scroll function with your own implementation. This way, you can gain full control over how you animate your scroll positions. Here's an example using GSAP's ScrollToPlugin:
import Swup from 'swup';
import SwupScrollPlugin from '@swup/scroll-plugin';
import { gsap } from 'gsap';
import ScrollToPlugin from 'gsap/ScrollToPlugin';
gsap.registerPlugin(ScrollToPlugin);
const swup = new Swup({
plugins: [new SwupScrollPlugin()]
});
/**
* Overwrite swup's scrollTo function
*/
swup.scrollTo = (offsetY, animate = true) => {
if (!animate) {
swup.hooks.callSync('scroll:start', undefined);
window.scrollTo(0, offsetY);
swup.hooks.callSync('scroll:end', undefined);
return;
}
/**
* Use GSAP ScrollToPlugin for animated scrolling
* @see https://greensock.com/docs/v3/Plugins/ScrollToPlugin
*/
gsap.to(window, {
duration: 0.8,
scrollTo: offsetY,
ease: 'power4.inOut',
autoKill: true,
onStart: () => {
swup.hooks.callSync('scroll:start', undefined);
},
onComplete: () => {
swup.hooks.callSync('scroll:end', undefined);
},
onAutoKill: () => {
swup.hooks.callSync('scroll:end', undefined);
},
});
};