Generally you will not need to read this guide 😊. Detection of scroll containers "should just work". However, if you are having issues with it you can dig more deeply into this guide 🕵️
@hello-pangea/dnd
will automatically detect the scroll containers for your application when a drag is starting. It does this by looking at the computed overflowX
and overflowY
values of an element.
If @hello-pangea/dnd
finds an element that has a computed overflowX
or overflowY
set to scroll
or auto
then that element is marked as a scroll container.
The css property overflow
(and overflow-x
, overflow-y
) controls what happens when the content of an element is bigger than the elements size.
For more information about
overflow
you can check out the CSS-Tricks overflow guide or the MDN overflow guide
visible
: (default) content will grow beyond boundary of any containing box without any clipping or scroll barsscroll
: clip overflow and always show a scroll bar, even if there is no content being overflowedauto
: clip overflow and only show scroll bar if there is any content in the overflow
Setting overflow: $value
is the same as setting overflow-x: $value
and overflow-y: $value
If only one axis has overflow-[x|y]: hidden
and the other is visible
(the default value) then it will be computed as auto
.
Computed value: as specified, except with visible/clip computing to auto/hidden (respectively) if one of overflow-x or overflow-y is neither visible nor clip
document.body
(<body>
) is different from document.documentElement
(the <html>
element). Any scroll on the html
element is considered a window
scroll. Most of the time any scroll bar that would have appeared on the body
will be merged with the html
scroll bar. However, there are situations where they can have different scrollable areas.
body
has an independent scroll bar to the html
element.
The body
element can be a scroll container if:
- the
body
element hasoverflow-[x|y]
set toauto
orscroll
AND - the
html
element hasoverflow-x
oroverflow-y
set to anything other thanvisible
(the default)
There seems to also be an additional requirement that we have not been able to accurately quantify regarding the relationship of the sizes of the html
and body
elements.
We have some playgrounds on codepen
that can be a good start for digging into trying to find a reliable way to determine if body
is an independent scroll container.
- scroll height on
body
- algorithm test
- scroll height on a
div
- another
body
playground things get weird - looking at browser apis
Try changing the
overflow
,height
andwidth
properties on thehtml
andbody
elements
It looks like when the html
element has some width
and height
related properties set then this can impact things. However, finding a purely javascript solution for detecting this has alluded us so far