Jessidhia / react-intersection-observer

Monitor if a component is inside the viewport, using IntersectionObserver API

Home Page:https://thebuilder.github.io/react-intersection-observer/

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react-intersection-observer

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React component that triggers a function when the component enters or leaves the viewport. No complex configuration needed, just wrap your views and it handles the events.

import Observer from 'react-intersection-observer'

<Observer>
  {inView => <h2>{`Header inside viewport ${inView}.`}</h2>}
</Observer>

Demo

See https://thebuilder.github.io/react-intersection-observer/ for a demo.

Scroll monitor

This module is used in react-scroll-percentage to monitor the scroll position of elements in view. This module is also a great example of using react-intersection-observer as the basis for more complex needs.

Installation

Install using Yarn:

yarn add react-intersection-observer

or NPM:

npm install react-intersection-observer --save

Polyfill for intersection-observer

The component requires the intersection-observer API to be available on the global namespace. At the moment you should include a polyfill to ensure support in all browsers.

You can import the polyfill directly or use a service like polyfill.io that can add it when needed.

yarn add intersection-observer

Then import it in your app:

import 'intersection-observer'

If you are using Webpack (or similar) you could use dynamic imports, to load the Polyfill only if needed. A basic implementation could look something like this:

loadPolyfills()
  .then(() => /* Render React application now that your Polyfills are ready */)

/**
* Do feature detection, to figure out which polyfills needs to be imported.
**/
function loadPolyfills() {
  const polyfills = []

  if (!supportsIntersectionObserver()) {
    polyfills.push(import('intersection-observer'))
  }

  return Promise.all(polyfills)
}

function supportsIntersectionObserver() {
  return (
    'IntersectionObserver' in global &&
    'IntersectionObserverEntry' in global &&
    'intersectionRatio' in IntersectionObserverEntry.prototype
  )
}

Props

The <Observer /> accepts the following props:

Name Type Default Required Description
children func/node true Children should be either a function or a node
root HTMLElement false The HTMLElement that is used as the viewport for checking visibility of the target. Defaults to the browser viewport if not specified or if null.
rootId String false Unique identifier for the root element - This is used to identify the IntersectionObserver instance, so it can be reused. If you defined a root element, without adding an id, it will create a new instance for all components.
rootMargin String '0px' false Margin around the root. Can have values similar to the CSS margin property, e.g. "10px 20px 30px 40px" (top, right, bottom, left).
tag String 'div' false Element tag to use for the wrapping component
threshold Number 0 false Number between 0 and 1 indicating the the percentage that should be visible before triggering. Can also be an array of numbers, to create multiple trigger points.
triggerOnce Bool false false Only trigger this method once
onChange Func false Call this function whenever the in view state changes
render Func false Use render method to only render content when inView

Example code

Child as function

The default way to use the Observer, is to pass a function as the child. It will be called whenever the state changes, with the new value of inView.

import Observer from 'react-intersection-observer'

<Observer>
  {inView => <h2>{`Header inside viewport ${inView}.`}</h2>}
</Observer>

Render callback

For simple use cases where you want to only render a component when it enters view, you can use the render prop.

import Observer from 'react-intersection-observer'

<Observer
  style={{ height: 200, position: 'relative' }}
  render={() => (
    <div
      style={{
        position: 'absolute',
        top: 0,
        bottom: 0,
      }}
    >
      <p>
        {'Make sure that the Observer controls the height, so it does not change change when element is added.'}
      </p>
    </div>
  )}
/>

OnChange callback

You can monitor the onChange method, and control the state in your own component. The child node will always be rendered.

import Observer from 'react-intersection-observer'

<Observer onChange={(inView) => console.log('Inview:', inView)}>
  <h2>
    Plain children are always rendered. Use onChange to monitor state.
  </h2>
</Observer>

About

Monitor if a component is inside the viewport, using IntersectionObserver API

https://thebuilder.github.io/react-intersection-observer/

License:MIT License


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