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spark-scroll

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angular directive for scroll-based actions. An element with the spark-scroll directive can be associated with any number of scroll positions. At each scroll position you can trigger any number of actions. An action can call any function on the scope, add or remove a class to the element, and/or broadcast an event from the element's scope . You can also easily define your own actions if the built-in actions aren't enough.

Additionally, the spark-scroll-animate directive includes all of the features of spark-scroll plus the ability to animate CSS properties in sync with the browser scroll position.

For animating SVG elements with spark-scroll-animate, use the GSAP plugin

spark-scroll demo

In the Wild

spark-scroll is being used in the following websites. (add your website to this list)

Compatibility

  • IE9+ (IE8 untested), all modern browsers
  • Angular 1.x

Inspiration

spark-scroll is heavily inspired by and borrows many ideas from ScrollMagic, including the spark-scroll demo which attempts to re-create ScrollMagic's demo page.

Download

  • via bower: bower install spark-scroll
  • via github

Setup

HTML

<script src="js/angular.js"></script>
<script src="js/lodash.js"></script>
<script src="js/spark-scroll.js"></script>
<script src="js/animation-frame.js"></script>

To use spark-scroll-animate requires additional JavaScript files, see the Dependencies

JavaScript

angular.module('app', ['gilbox.sparkScroll']);

Dependencies

Depending on the desired features, spark-scroll won't try to load in any libraries that don't get utilized.

Usage

Basic Example (spark-scroll)

<h1 spark-scroll="{
    120:{ onUp: myUpFn },
    121:{ 'onUp,onDown': myUpDownFn, 'downAddClass,upRemoveClass': 'my-class my-other-class' },
    140:{ 'upBroadcast': 'event-to-broadcast', 'upEmit,downEmit': 'event-to-emit' }
    }">
  This Title is Spark
</h1>

Formula Example (spark-scroll)

<h1 spark-scroll="{
            topTop:{ onUp: myUpFn },
    'topCenter-20':{ 'onUp,onDown': myUpDownFn, 'downAddClass,upRemoveClass': 'my-class my-other-class' },
         topBottom:{ 'upBroadcast': 'event-to-broadcast', 'upEmit,downEmit': 'event-to-emit' }
    }">
  This Title is Spark
</h1>

Animated Example (spark-scroll-animate)

<h1 spark-scroll-animate="{
            topTop:{ color: '#f00', marginLeft: '50px' },
         topBottom:{ color: '#000', marginLeft: '0px' }
    }">
  This Title is Spark Animated
</h1>

Animated Less-Basic Example with easing (spark-scroll-animate)

<h1 spark-scroll-animate="{
    ease:'easeOutQuad',
    120:{opacity:'0'},
    121:{opacity:'0.8', top:'151px', color:'#fff'},
    140:{opacity:'1.0', top:'0px', color:'#444'}
    }">
  This Title is Sparky
</h1>

Animated Example with Override element-wide easing at a specific keyframe (spark-scroll-animate)

<h1 spark-scroll-animate="{
    ease:'easeOutQuad',
    120:{opacity:'0'},
    121:{opacity:'0.8', top:'151px', color:'#fff'},
    140:{opacity:'1.0', top:'0px', color:'#444', ease: 'linear'}
    }">
  This Title is Sparky
</h1>

spark-scroll-callback: Callback on Scroll Event

This attribute expects a string value, that when evaluated in the element's scope should return a function reference. The function reference will be called for every frame of scrolling. spark-scroll internally debounces scroll events so the callback will not necessarily be called on all native scroll events. Note that the concept of a frame can be further affected by the spark-scroll-ease property.

Every time the function is called, it is provided one argument, ratio which is a decimal value between 0 and 1 representing the progress of scroll within the limits of the maximum and minimum scroll positions of the spark-scroll or spark-scroll-animate attributes. The simplest use of spark-scroll-callback would look something like this:

<h1 spark-scroll-callback="myFunctionOnScope"
    spark-scroll="{ topBottom:0, topTop:0 }">

When spark-scroll calls myFunctionOnScope(ratio), the ratio is calculated based on the current scroll position, and the topBottom and topTop formulas.

Note that in the preceding example instead of assigning an object to the keyframes, we simply assign 0. However, if we wanted to use a callback while at the same time taking advantage of action and animation properties we could do something like this:

<h1 spark-scroll-callback="myOtherFunctionOnScope"
    spark-scroll-animate="{
            topTop:{ opacity: 0 },
         topCenter:{ opacity: 1, 'downAddClass,upRemoveClass': 'my-class my-other-class' },
         topBottom:{ 'upBroadcast': 'event-to-broadcast' }
    }">
  This Title is Spark
</h1>

Note that in the preceding example, when spark-scroll-animate calls myOtherFunctionOnScope(ratio), the ratio argument is calculated using the topTop and topBottom formulas because they are at the extremes of the keyframe range for this element.

spark-scroll-bind-once: One-Time Binding

If you are using a version of angular (<=1.3) which doesn't support one-time lazy binding you can use the spark-scroll-bind-once attribute to achieve the same thing. Because spark-scroll will create a rather expensive deep watch for the spark-scroll(-animate) attribute, it's a good idea to use one-time binding whenever possible.

spark-scroll-ease: Scroll Easing

Add this attribute to ease the position of the scrollbar so jumps in scroll position will have smooth animation. This may cause scrolling to feel laggy but animations will look smoother.

Built-in Actions

.constant 'sparkActionProps', {

  # When the up, down fns are called, `this` is the current keyFrame object and `o` is the action object
  # therefore @element and @scope refer to the current element and it's scope

  # fn reference that is called when scrolled down past keyframe
  'onDown':
    down: (o)-> o.val(@, 'onDown', o)

  # fn reference that is called when scrolled up past keyframe
  'onUp':
    up: (o)-> o.val(@, 'onUp', o)

  # class(es) added when scrolled down past keyframe,
  'downAddClass':
    down: (o)-> @element.addClass(o.val)

  # class(es) added when scrolled up past keyframe,
  'upAddClass':
    up: (o)-> @element.addClass(o.val)

  # class(es) removed when scrolled down past keyframe
  'downRemoveClass':
    down: (o)-> @element.removeClass(o.val)

  # class(es) removed when scrolled up past keyframe
  'upRemoveClass':
    up: (o)-> @element.removeClass(o.val)

  # broadcasts an event when scrolled down past keyframe
  'downBroadcast':
    down: (o)-> @scope.$broadcast(o.val, @)

  # broadcasts an event when scrolled up past keyframe
  'upBroadcast':
    up: (o)-> @scope.$broadcast(o.val, @)

  # emits an event when scrolled down past keyframe
  'downEmit':
    down: (o)-> @scope.$emit(o.val, @)

  # emits an event when scrolled up past keyframe
  'upEmit':
    up: (o)-> @scope.$emit(o.val, @)
}

Register a custom action

app.config(function(sparkActionProps) {

    angular.extend(sparkActionProps, {
    
        // Change the element's text when scrolling down past it
        downText: {
            down: function(o) {
                this.element.text(o.val);
            }
        },
        
        // Change the element's text when scrolling up past it
        upText: {
            up: function(o) {
                this.element.text(o.val);
            }
        }
        
    });
    
});

Here's the same thing in Coffeescript:

app.config (sparkActionProps) ->
    angular.extend sparkActionProps, 
        downText:
            down: (o)-> @element.text(o.val)
            
        upText:
            up: (o)-> @element.text(o.val)

Built-in Formulas

.constant 'sparkFormulas', {

  # formulas are always in the format: variable or variable<offset>
  #   (note that you cannot combine formula variables)
  # for example:
  #
  #      topTop+40
  #      topBottom-120
  #      topCenter
  #      centerTop
  #      centerCenter-111
  #
  # are valid formulas. (topTop40 is valid as well but less intuitive)
  #
  # each property of the sparkFormulas object is a formula variable

  # top of the element hits the top of the viewport
  topTop: `function topTop(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.top - containerRect.top + offset) }`

  # top of the element hits the center of the viewport
  topCenter: `function topCenter(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.top - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight/2 + offset) }`

  # top of the element hits the bottom of the viewport
  topBottom: `function topBottom(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) {  return ~~(rect.top - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight + offset) }`

  # center of the element hits the top of the viewport
  centerTop: `function centerTop(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.top + rect.height/2 - containerRect.top + offset) }`

  # center of the element hits the center of the viewport
  centerCenter: `function centerCenter(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.top + rect.height/2 - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight/2 + offset) }`

  # center of the element hits the bottom of the viewport
  centerBottom: `function centerBottom(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) {  return ~~(rect.top + rect.height/2 - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight + offset) }`

  # bottom of the element hits the top of the viewport
  bottomTop: `function bottomTop(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.bottom - containerRect.top + offset) }`

  # bottom of the element hits the bottom of the viewport
  bottomBottom: `function bottomBottom(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.bottom - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight + offset) }`

  # bottom of the element hits the center of the viewport
  bottomCenter: `function bottomCenter(element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) { return ~~(rect.bottom - containerRect.top - container.clientHeight/2 + offset) }`
}

Register a Custom Formula

app.config (sparkFormulas) ->
    angular.extend sparkFormulas, 
        # similar to the built-in topBottom formula, except that offset is calculated as a percentage of the viewport height
        topBottomPct: (element, container, rect, containerRect, offset) ->  ~~(rect.bottom - containerRect.top + offset*containerRect.clientHeight/100)

Keeping Formulas up-to-date

An element with a spark-scroll(-animate) directive which utilizes formulas will need to recalculate formula-based scroll positions any time the element changes position relative to the document element. With the exception of a window resize event (which spark-scroll watches for automatically), spark-scroll doesn't know when to update formula-calculated scroll positions. In order to keep spark-scroll up-to-date employ one or both of the following techniques:

  • Detect when an element's position changes and $broadcast the sparkInvalidate event on $rootScope or any scope which encapsulates all spark-scrolled elements with formulas.
  • Inject the sparkSetup service and call:
    • sparkSetup.enableInvalidationInterval(delay) to automatically broadcast sparkInvalidate on the $rootScope every delay ms. delay is optional and by default is 1000 ms.
    • sparkSetup.disableInvalidationInterval() to disable the automatic broadcast interval. Be sure to call this function in the scope's $destroy event handler.

Debugging

Inject sparkSetup and enable console logging messages with:

sparkSetup.debug = true;

Globally disabling

Inject sparkSetup and disable all spark-scroll directives with:

sparkSetup.disableSparkScroll = true;

Inject sparkSetup and disable all spark-scroll-animate directives with:

sparkSetup.disableSparkScrollAnimate = true;

Custom Animation Engine

sparkAnimator can be overridden to use any animation engine so long as the sparkAnimator service supports the following Rekapi-like interface:

animator = sparkAnimator.instance()   # returns a new instance
actor = animator.addActor({ context: <dom element> })  # works just like rekapi.addActor(...)
actor.keyframe(...)
actor.moveKeyframe(...)
actor.removeAllKeyframes()
animator.update(...)       # works just like rekapi.update(...)

See below and the Rekapi docs for implementation details.

Note that overriding the sparkAnimator service eliminates the Rekapi and shifty dependencies for spark-scroll-animate directive.

actor.keyframe(scrollY, animations, ease)

Creates a new keyframe.

scrollY

The vertical scroll position (the library will treat this as time)

animations

Simple object with css properties and values

  • {marginLeft: "0px", opacity: 1}
  • {borderRight: "5px", opacity: 0}

ease

Simple object with property for each property in animations object (see above)

  • {marginLeft: "easeOutSine", opacity: "bouncePast"}
  • {borderRight: "linear", opacity: "easeinSine"}

actor.finishedAddingKeyframes

actors can optionally expose this function which will be called when parsing has completed

actor.moveKeyframe(from, to)

Moves a keyframe to a different time (scroll) value.

from

Source keyframe

to

Destination keyframe

animator.update(scrollY)

Updates the animation to a specific keyframe.

scrollY

The vertical scroll position (the library will treat this as time)

Custom Animation Engine: TweenMax (GSAP)

This repo includes a plugin for TweenMax, spark-scroll-gsap.js which allows you to use TweenMax in place of Shifty and Rekapi for animation. The syntax when using TweenMax will differ slightly because TweenMax has some differences in the animation properties it supports. For example, while Rekapi supports the rotate property which takes a string value like 360deg, TweenMax instead supports rotation which takes a numeric value like 360. TweenMax also supports a rather different set of easing equations than Rekapi.

spark-scroll TweenMax demo

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