Custom overlay-scrollbars with native scrolling mechanism for Angular, it also provides a cross-browser smooth scroll directive.
- Live Demo
- Installation
- Usage
- Options
- Scroll Functions
- Styling
- Update scrollbars manually
- Smooth Scroll
- Development
- Issues
- Author
- Credit
- More plugins
NPM
npm i -S ngx-scrollbar @angular/cdk
YARN
yarn add ngx-scrollbar @angular/cdk
Import NgScrollbarModule
in your module
import { NgScrollbarModule } from 'ngx-scrollbar';
@NgModule({
imports: [
// ...
NgScrollbarModule
]
})
In your template
<ng-scrollbar>
<!-- Content -->
</ng-scrollbar>
Here is a stackblitz
-
[trackX]: boolean
Horizontal scrollbar, default
false
-
[trackY]: boolean
Vertical scrollbar, default
true
-
[autoHide]: boolean
Show scrollbar on mouse hover only, default
false
-
[autoUpdate]: boolean
Auto-update scrollbars on content changes, default:
true
-
[viewClass]: string
Add custom class to the view, default:
null
-
[barClass]: string
Add custom class to scrollbars, default:
null
-
[thumbClass]: string
Add custom class to scrollbars' thumbnails, default:
null
-
[overlay]: boolean
Make scrollbars position appears over content, default:
false
-
[disabled]: boolean
Disable the custom scrollbars and use the native ones instead, default:
false
-
[scrollToDuration]: number
The smooth scroll duration when a scrollbar is clicked, default
400
. -
[disableOnBreakpoints]: Array of the CDK Breakpoints
Disable custom scrollbars on specific breakpoints, default:
[Breakpoints.HandsetLandscape, Breakpoints.HandsetPortrait]
Because it is not possible to hide the native scrollbars on mobile browsers, the only solution is to fallback to the native scrollbars. To disable this option give it false value.
To use NgScrollbar functions, you will need to get the component reference from the template. this can be done using the @ViewChild
decorator, for example:
@ViewChild(NgScrollbar) scrollRef: NgScrollbar;
All scroll functions return a cold observable that requires calling subscribe()
, it will emits once scrolling is done and unsubscribe itself, no need to unsubscribe from the function manually.
scrollRef.scrollTo(options: ScrollToOptions).subscribe()
- Left: x position.
- Top: y position.
- Duration: time to reach position in milliseconds, default null.
- EaseFunc: the easing function for the smooth scroll.
scrollRef.scrollToElement(selector, offset?, duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
- Selector: target element selector.
- Offset: Set scroll offset, default 0.
- Duration: time to reach position in milliseconds, default null.
- EaseFunc: the easing function for the smooth scroll.
scrollRef.scrollXTo(position, duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
scrollRef.scrollYTo(position, duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
- Position: scrolling position on Y axis in pixels.
- Duration: time to reach position in milliseconds, default null.
- EaseFunc: the easing function for the smooth scroll.
scrollRef.scrollToTop(duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
scrollRef.scrollToBottom(duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
scrollRef.scrollToLeft(duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
scrollRef.scrollToRight(duration?, easeFunc?).subscribe()
- Duration: time to reach position in milliseconds, default null.
- EaseFunc: the easing function for the smooth scroll.
<ng-scrollbar #scrollbarRef>
<!-- Content -->
</ng-scrollbar>
<button (click)="scrollbarRef.scrollToTop()">Go to top</button>
<ng-scrollbar #scrollbarRef>
<div id="..."></div>
<div id="..."></div>
<div id="..."></div>
<div id="usage"></div>
<div id="..."></div>
</ng-scrollbar>
<button (click)="scrollbarRef.scrollToElement('#usage')">Usage Section</button>
Or using the @ViewChild
decorator
@ViewChild(NgScrollbar) scrollRef: NgScrollbar;
scrollToUsageSection() {
this.scrollRef.scrollToElement('#usage');
}
If you wrap the <router-outlet>
with <ng-scrollbar>
, you can scroll to top on route changes, like the following example:
export class AppComponent {
@ViewChild(NgScrollbar) scrollRef: NgScrollbar;
constructor(router: Router) {
router.events.pipe(
filter(event => event instanceof NavigationEnd)),
filter(() => !!this.scrollRef)),
tap((event: NavigationEnd) => this.scrollRef.scrollToTop())
).subscribe();
}
}
Text area example:
Component({
selector: 'text-area-example',
template: `
<ng-scrollbar>
<textarea [(ngModel)]="text"></textarea>
</ng-scrollbar>
`
})
export class AppComponent implements OnInit {
@ViewChild(NgScrollbar) textAreaScrollbar: NgScrollbar;
setText(value: string) {
this.text = value;
// You might need to give a tiny delay before updating the scrollbar
setTimeout(() => {
this.textAreaScrollbar.update();
}, 200);
}
}
You can also automatically resize the <text-area>
with the CDK Text-field.
<ng-scrollbar>
<textarea cdkTextareaAutosize #autosize="cdkTextareaAutosize" [(ngModel)]="code"></textarea>
</ng-scrollbar>
@ViewChild(NgScrollbar) textAreaScrollbar: NgScrollbar;
@ViewChild(CdkTextareaAutosize) textareaAutosize: CdkTextareaAutosize;
setCode(code: string) {
this.code = code;
this.textareaAutosize.resizeToFitContent();
setTimeout(() => {
this.textAreaScrollbar.update();
}, 200);
}
The easiest way to use custom styles is to give each part of the scrollbar a custom class
<ng-scrollbar barClass="scroll-bar" thumbClass="scroll-thumbs">
<!-- content -->
</ng-scrollbar>
::ng-deep {
.scroll-bar {
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.4) !important;
border-radius: 4px;
}
.scroll-thumbs {
background-color: rgba(161, 27, 27, 0.4) !important;
&:hover,
&:active {
background-color: rgba(161, 27, 27, 0.7) !important;
}
}
}
The [smoothScroll]
directive allows you to scroll the host element smoothly using the scroll functions that works on cross-browser.
Since v3.0.0, The SmoothScrollModule
has been added as an independent module, the scrollable element does not have to be <ng-scrollbar>
.
import { SmoothScrollModule } from 'ngx-scrollbar';
@NgModule({
imports: [
// ...
SmoothScrollModule
]
})
<div smoothScroll #scrollable class="scrollable-container}">
<!-- child elements -->
</div>
<button (click)="scrollable.scrollToBottom(500)">Scroll to bottom</button>
See all Scroll Functions.
This project uses the Angular CLI for building the library.
$ ng build ngx-scrollbar --prod
or
$ npm run build-lib
If you identify any errors in the library, or have an idea for an improvement, please open an issue.
- Inspired by gemini-scrollbar.