Swipe is the most accurate touch slider. It is extremely lightweight (only 5kb minified) and works across all browsers, including IE7+.
Swipe was originally created by Brad Birdsall, who stopped updating his repository. This version is maintained by Felix Liu, with new features and bugfixes.
You can install this package directly via Bower bower install swipe-js
or NPM npm install swipejs
.
See the online example for a simple demo.
Swipe requires just a few lines of markup. Here is an example:
<div id="slider" class="swipe">
<div class="swipe-wrap">
<div></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
</div>
</div>
Above is the initial required structure– a series of elements wrapped in two containers. Place any content you want within the items. The containing div
will need to be passed to the Swipe function like so:
Swipe requires the following styles to be added to your stylesheet:
.swipe {
overflow: hidden;
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.swipe-wrap {
overflow: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.swipe-wrap > div {
float:left;
width:100%;
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
}
You may initialize a Swipe slider with only one line of javascript code:
window.mySwipe = new Swipe(document.getElementById('slider'));
I always place this at the bottom of the page, externally, to verify the page is ready.
Swipe can take an optional second parameter– an object of key/value settings:
- startSlide Integer (default:
0
): index position at which Swipe should start. - speed Integer (default:
300
): speed of prev and next transitions in milliseconds. - auto Integer: when specified, start an auto-playing slideshow (time in milliseconds between slide change).
- draggable Boolean (default:
false
): enable mouse drag support in desktop browsers. - continuous Boolean (default:
true
): create an infinite feel with no endpoints. - autoRestart Boolean (default:
false
): auto restart slideshow after user's touch event or next/prev calls. - disableScroll Boolean (default:
false
): prevent any touch events on this container from scrolling the page. - stopPropagation Boolean (default:
false
): stop event propagation. - callback Function (default:
function() {}
): runs at slide change. - transitionEnd Function (default:
function() {}
): runs at the end of a slide transition.
window.mySwipe = new Swipe(document.getElementById('slider'), {
startSlide: 0,
speed: 400,
auto: 3000,
draggable: false,
continuous: true,
disableScroll: false,
stopPropagation: false,
callback: function(index, elem) {},
transitionEnd: function(index, elem) {}
});
A Swipe instance exposes the following public methods:
prev()
slide to the previous slide.next()
slide to the next slide.getPos()
: return the current slide index position.getNumSlides()
: return the number of slides.slide(index, duration)
: slide to the position matching theindex
(integer) (duration
: speed of transition in milliseconds).restart()
: restart the slideshow with autoplay.stop()
: stop the slideshow and disable autoplay.kill()
: completely remove the Swipe instance.
Swipe is now compatible with all browsers, including IE7+. Swipe works best on devices that support CSS transforms and touch events, but can be used without these as well. A few helper methods determine touch and CSS transition support and choose the proper animation methods accordingly.
Send me a note if you want your logo here
- Refactor
swipe.js
for better code structure
Copyright (c) 2015 Brad Birdsall and Felix Liu Licensed under the The MIT License (MIT).