Disable auto scroll on Safari iOS16 and iOS 15 + single tab enabled - css

Hy everyone.
I'm facing an issue that makes me lose my mind.
On iOS 15 or 16, Safari, with the setting "Single tab" enabled (meaning you have the Safari searchbar on top), when I focus my input, a weird padding animation gets triggered.
Here is my code, the most simplified possible.
The stack:
react
scss
export const SearchBusinessPage = ({whatInputContent, onWhatChange}) => {
return (
<div className={classes({ inputContainer: true })}>
<input
autoComplete={'off'}
className={classes({
input: true
})}
type='text'
value={whatInputContent || ''}
onChange={e => onWhatChange(e?.currentTarget?.value || '')}
/>
</div>
);
}
and the CSS
.inputContainer {
display: flex;
flex-direction: row;
justify-content: space-between;
align-items: flex-start;
background: linear-gradient(to top, #c6ffdd, #fbd786, #f7797d);
height: 100vh;
width: 100%;
}
.input {
flex: 1;
color: var(--grey-700);
font: var(--regular) var(--body-3);
&::placeholder {
color: var(--grey-500);
opacity: 1;
}
&:focus {
&::placeholder {
opacity: 0.5;
}
}
}
As you can see, nothing crazy in my code.
But I can't get rid of that iOS behavior that, on input focus, wants to add a padding top or I don't know what. I tried many thing but couldn't find what can I do. Any idea around here ?

Well, if anyone has the same trouble, the solution I found was, actually, pretty straight forward. You can use this CSS pretty high in the DOM. The solution comes with unintended side effects, but it works anyway.
That blocks Safari UI from moving. So, no UI move, no problem 🤷
height: 100%;
max-height: 100%;
min-height: 100%;
width: 100%;
position: absolute;
overflow: scroll;

Related

Mix-blend-mode difference not working and background image of parent is in front of children regardless of z-index

Edit: Apologies, forgot to add the sandbox to tinker: https://codesandbox.io/s/inspiring-wing-tekl08
I'm having an issue with my CSS. To clarify, the reason I want to do this is because I want my text to have a mix-blend-mode: difference on h1 within a media query, and after researching on here and other forums I've concluded that it's only possible if the background image which the text blends with is inserted via CSS instead of an <img/> in my React Component. If this is possible in any other way and I'm going about this wrong, feel free to give me a better option.
For some reason, the background image that I've inserted (see code below) is placing itself in front of h1. I've tried setting a z-index: 1 on the image and position: relative - z-index:something>1 on the text but it doesn't seem to work. Same goes for the <Nav/> tag that can be seen in the component - it ends up hidden behind the image.
Component:
const PageHeader = () => {
return (
<motion.div
id="header"
variants={imgFade}
initial="hidden"
animate="show"
className="bg-image"
>
<div className="header-container">
<div className="title-container">
<motion.h1
variants={textAnimate(0.7)}
initial="hidden"
animate="show"
>
FNAME
</motion.h1>
</div>
<br />
<div className="title-container">
<motion.h1
variants={textAnimate(0.8)}
initial="hidden"
animate="show"
>
SNAME
</motion.h1>
</div>
<Nav />
</div>
</motion.div>
);
};
export default PageHeader;
CSS:
.bg-image {
background: url("img/compressed/Website\ Cover_Open_NoBG.png") no-repeat
bottom right;
background-size: contain;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
float: right;
}
.header-container {
margin-left: 100px;
margin-top: 200px;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
justify-content: flex-start;
}
.title-container {
overflow: hidden;
}
h1 {
font-family: "Lato";
font-size: 5rem;
font-weight: 300;
vertical-align: middle;
text-align: left;
mix-blend-mode: color;
pointer-events: none;
}
Apologies if it's blaringly obvious - again if someone can find an alternative to do the code below then I would much rather follow through with that:
#media screen and (max-width: 1200px) {
.h1 {
mix-blend-mode: difference;
}
Thanks!
UPDATE: This has been solved by just putting position: relative; z-index: 2 on .header-container. Perfect example of stopping coding after 3am or else you get blinders on and can't see the obvious answer.
In case anyone can help regarding mix-blend-mode: difference do let me know.
UPDATE 2: Second issue solved! Had to put a background color of white on the background property and also put the mix-blend: mode on .header-container - Text had to be changed to white and kept on difference blend even on a white backdrop.

Css ( styled-components ) issue with dropdown

I'm developing a dropdown, where you click or focus the input, a white container should display at the bottom of the input, the problem is that, the focus is not working and i don't know why ( i hate css :/ )
So this is the code
This is the structure
<NavbartPart1SearchBar>
<input type="text" placeholder="Buscar en Facebook" maxLength={100} />
{/* Dropdown */}
<NavbarPart1Dropdown> </NavbarPart1Dropdown>
</NavbartPart1SearchBar>
export const NavbarPart1Dropdown = styles.div`
display: none;
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 20vh;
background: white;
`;
export const NavbartPart1SearchBar = styles.div`
position: relative;
input{
width: 255px;
font-size: 1.53rem;
font-weight: 300;
padding: 1.23rem 1.75rem;
border-radius: 2.1rem;
background: #F0F2F5;
&:focus ${NavbarPart1Dropdown} {
display: flex;
}
}
`;
So as you can see, input has a focus event, when i focus on it, i add display flex to the other container, but it won't work, do you see any problems with my code?
Know let me show you how it should look
Do you see the black part ? i want that to appear when focus, so, if you can help me, you're cool !
You can select the next sibling element with + in CSS. So the following should work:
input:focus + ${NavbarPart1Dropdown} { display: block; }

Override CSS in React

I am using Wolox's chat widget
https://github.com/Wolox/react-chat-widget
And I am trying to make a horizontal row of multiple chat widgets along the bottom of the screen. I am trying to override the class .rcw-widget-container
.rcw-widget-container {
bottom: 0;
display: -ms-flexbox;
display: flex;
-ms-flex-direction: column;
flex-direction: column;
margin: 0 20px 20px 0;
max-width: 370px;
position: fixed;
right: 0;
z-index: 1;
}
I have two chat Widget's that I want to put side by side, but I want to do it inline with React. Because my number of widgets will grow depending on how many user chats I open. So the right positioning needs to be dynamic. I just don't know how to accomplish this. Or if it's possible
https://codesandbox.io/s/vvnjyr9r30
EDIT
Something like this may work, but I don't think I am getting the syntax right.
.chat1 .rcw-widget-container {
right: 350px;
}
.chat2 .rcw-widget-container {
right: 400px;
}
Component
<Widget className="chat1" handleNewUserMessage={(e) => this.handleNewUserMessage(e, new Date().getTime())} />
<Widget className="chat2" handleNewUserMessage={(e) => this.handleNewUserMessage(e, new Date().getTime())} />
as I can understand probably you are looking for something like this:
In this case you can try:
.App {
font-family: sans-serif;
text-align: center;
display: flex;
flex-direction: row;
}
.rcw-widget-container {
border: 2px red solid;
position: initial;
}
Also, try to reorder the imports in index.js to override the styles.
import "react-chat-widget/lib/styles.css";
import "./styles.css";
While not inherently possible in CSS modules alone, the author of the react-toolbox library has actually solved this particular problem very nicely
Read their github docs which are more in depth on the subject at https://github.com/react-toolbox/react-toolbox#customizing-components
A list of the themeable classes for a particular component is given on the component demo page on their site too

Change the size of the number input spinner?

On a number input it has a spinner which has several css properties but I can't seem to find a way to change the size of the spinner itself. I am talking about <input type='number'>. I tried finding something that would change the size but I haven't been able to find anything. The other issue I guess is that every browser on possibly every OS is going to have a potentially different implementation of the spinner itself. When I say spinner I am talking about the highlighted part of this image.
I cannot use the JQuery UI spinner because the large app I am developing uses JQuery UI 1.8 which did not include the spinner. Upgrading causes issues.
Not ideal, but try playing around with the CSS transform property:
For example,
input[type=number]
{
transform: scale(2);
}
This increases the size of the entire input, but maybe this (in conjunction with setting font-size, line-height, height, width) can produce a desired effect.
This CSS seems to work in Chrome by replacing the spinners with a static image (of a spinner) and then control the size and position of the image within the element and making it invisible by default until the user hovers over it:
* Spin Buttons modified */
input[type="number"].mod::-webkit-outer-spin-button,
input[type="number"].mod::-webkit-inner-spin-button {
-webkit-appearance: none;
background: #0F0 url(data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAkAAAAJCAYAAADgkQYQAAAAKUlEQVQYlWNgwAT/sYhhKPiPT+F/LJgEsHv37v+EMGkmkuImoh2NoQAANlcun/q4OoYAAAAASUVORK5CYII=) no-repeat center center;
width: 3em;
border-left: 1px solid #0f0;
opacity: 0; /* shows Spin Buttons per default (Chrome >= 39) */
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
}
input[type="number"].mod::-webkit-inner-spin-button:hover,
input[type="number"].mod::-webkit-inner-spin-button:active{
box-shadow: 0 0 2px #0CF;
opacity: .7;
}
Plain ole HTML...
No library or images required.
HTML
<!-- Score Control Container -->
<div class = "Score-Control">
<div class = "Score-Value-Container">
<div id="RoundScore" class="Score-Value">
10
</div>
</div>
<div class = "Score-UpDown">
<div class = "Score-Button-Container">
<div class = "Score-Button " onclick="IncrementScore();">
â–˛
</div>
</div>
<div class = "Score-Button-Container">
<div class = "Score-Button " onclick="DecrementScore();">
â–Ľ
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
CSS
.Score-Control {
width: 200px;
}
.Score-Value-Container{
position:relative;
display: table;
overflow: hidden;
height:80px;
background-color:#aaa;
width:66%;
float:left;
font-size: 44px;
vertical-align: middle;
text-align: center;
}
.Score-Value {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
text-align: center;
}
.Score-UpDown{
position:relative;
height:80px;
background-color: burlywood;
width:34%;
float:right;
}
.Score-Button-Container {
display: table;
height: 50%;
width: 100%;
overflow: hidden;
background-color:green;
}
.Score-Button {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
text-align: center;
font-size: 27px;
}
JavaScript
function IncrementScore() {
var RoundScore = document.getElementById("RoundScore").innerHTML;
if (RoundScore < 10) {
RoundScore++
document.getElementById("RoundScore").innerHTML = RoundScore;
}
}
function DecrementScore() {
var RoundScore = document.getElementById("RoundScore").innerHTML;
if (RoundScore > 1) {
RoundScore--
document.getElementById("RoundScore").innerHTML = RoundScore;
}
}
Code in JSFiddle
You could make an input field with two buttons for up and down and style them then the way you like.
<input type="text" name="something">
<span class="goUp"></span>
<span class="goDown"></span>
js:
var inputField = $('input[name="something"]');
$('.goUp').click(function() {
inputField.val(inputField.val() + 1);
});
$('.goDown').click(function() {
inputField.val(inputField.val() - 1);
});
you then should also check, that the input has only numbers inside, so that your +/- 1 really works.
The “size of the spinner” is a vague concept, but the <input type=number> element seems to obey at least width, height, and font property settings. Example:
<input type=number value=42 min=0 max=99
style="font: 24pt Courier; width: 3ch; height: 3em">
Whether such settings are useful and whether they should work is a different issue. It can be argued that the implementation of such elements is expected to be a browser-dependent nice, useable widget suitable for the browsing conditions, rather than something that authors should mess around with. But in practice, the widget is largely affected by CSS settings, and this might be a good thing in practice, e.g. because the input box tends to be too wide by default. (We could expect browsers to set it according to min and max values, but this just doesn’t happen at present.) The risk is that by setting the width, you might conflict with the implementation. The code above expects the up and down arrows to take a width of one character at most, but this guess might some day be wrong.

Prevent body scrolling but allow overlay scrolling

I've been searching for a "lightbox" type solution that allows this but haven't found one yet (please, suggest if you know of any).
The behavior I'm trying to recreate is just like what you'd see at Pinterest when clicking on an image. The overlay is scrollable (as in the whole overlay moves up like a page on top of a page) but the body behind the overlay is fixed.
I attempted to create this with just CSS (i.e. a div overlay on top of the whole page and body with overflow: hidden), but it doesn't prevent div from being scrollable.
How to keep the body/page from scrolling but keep scrolling inside the fullscreen container?
Theory
Looking at current implementation of the pinterest site (it might change in the future), when you open the overlay, a noscroll class is applied to the body element (setting overflow: hidden) making the body no longer scrollable.
The overlay created on-the-fly or already injected in the page and made visible via display: block — it makes no difference – has position : fixed and overflow-y: scroll, with top, left, right and bottom properties set to 0: this style makes the overlay fill the whole viewport (but now we are in 2022, so you may use inset: 0 instead).
The div inside the overlay is in position: static so the vertical scrollbar is related to that element. This is resulting in a scrollable but fixed overlay.
When you close the overlay, you have to hide it (using display: none) and you could even remove the node via javascript (or just the content inside, it's up to you but also depends on the nature of the content).
The final step is to also remove the noscroll class applied to the body (so the overflow property gets back to the value it had previously)
Code
Codepen Example
(it works by changing the aria-hidden attribute of the overlay in order to show and hide it and to increase its accessibility).
Markup
(open button)
<button type="button" class="open-overlay">OPEN LAYER</button>
(overlay and close button)
<section class="overlay" aria-hidden="true" tabindex="-1">
<div>
<h2>Hello, I'm the overlayer</h2>
...
<button type="button" class="close-overlay">CLOSE LAYER</button>
</div>
</section>
CSS
.noscroll {
overflow: hidden;
}
.overlay {
position: fixed;
overflow-y: scroll;
inset: 0; }
[aria-hidden="true"] { display: none; }
[aria-hidden="false"] { display: block; }
Javascript (vanilla-JS)
var body = document.body,
overlay = document.querySelector('.overlay'),
overlayBtts = document.querySelectorAll('button[class$="overlay"]'),
openingBtt;
[].forEach.call(overlayBtts, function(btt) {
btt.addEventListener('click', function() {
/* Detect the button class name */
var overlayOpen = this.className === 'open-overlay';
/* storing a reference to the opening button */
if (overlayOpen) {
openingBtt = this;
}
/* Toggle the aria-hidden state on the overlay and the
no-scroll class on the body */
overlay.setAttribute('aria-hidden', !overlayOpen);
body.classList.toggle('noscroll', overlayOpen);
/* On some mobile browser when the overlay was previously
opened and scrolled, if you open it again it doesn't
reset its scrollTop property */
overlay.scrollTop = 0;
/* forcing focus for Assistive technologies but note:
- if your modal has just a phrase and a button move the
focus on the button
- if your modal has a long text inside (e.g. a privacy
policy) move the focus on the first heading inside
the modal
- otherwise just focus the modal.
When you close the overlay restore the focus on the
button that opened the modal.
*/
if (overlayOpen) {
overlay.focus();
}
else {
openingBtt.focus();
openingBtt = null;
}
}, false);
});
/* detect Escape key when the overlay is open */
document.body.addEventListener('keyup', (ev) => {
if (ev.key === "Escape" && overlay.getAttribute('aria-hidden') === 'false') {
overlay.setAttribute('aria-hidden', 'true');
body.classList.toggle('noscroll', false);
openingBtt.focus();
openingBtt = null;
}
})
Finally, here's another example in which the overlay opens with a fade-in effect by a CSS transition applied to the opacity property. Also a padding-right is applied to avoid a reflow on the underlying text when the scrollbar disappears.
Codepen Example (fade)
CSS
.noscroll { overflow: hidden; }
#media (min-device-width: 1025px) {
/* not strictly necessary, just an experiment for
this specific example and couldn't be necessary
at all on some browser */
.noscroll {
padding-right: 15px;
}
}
.overlay {
position: fixed;
overflow-y: scroll;
inset: 0;
}
[aria-hidden="true"] {
transition: opacity 1s, z-index 0s 1s;
width: 100vw;
z-index: -1;
opacity: 0;
}
[aria-hidden="false"] {
transition: opacity 1s;
width: 100%;
z-index: 1;
opacity: 1;
}
overscroll-behavior css property allows to override the browser's default overflow scroll behavior when reaching the top/bottom of content.
Just add the following styles to overlay:
.overlay {
overscroll-behavior: contain;
...
}
Codepen demo
Currently works in Chrome, Firefox and IE(caniuse)
For more details check google developers article.
If you want to prevent overscrolling on ios, you can add position fixed to your .noscroll class
body.noscroll{
position:fixed;
overflow:hidden;
}
Most solutions have the problem that they do not retain the scroll position, so I took a look at how Facebook does it. In addition to setting the underlaying content to position: fixed they also set the top dynamically to retain the scroll position:
scrollPosition = window.pageYOffset;
mainEl.style.top = -scrollPosition + 'px';
Then, when you remove the overlay again, you need to reset the scroll position:
window.scrollTo(0, scrollPosition);
I created a little example to demonstrate this solution
let overlayShown = false;
let scrollPosition = 0;
document.querySelector('.toggle').addEventListener('click', function() {
if (!overlayShown) {
showOverlay();
} else {
removeOverlay();
}
overlayShown = !overlayShown;
});
function showOverlay() {
scrollPosition = window.pageYOffset;
const mainEl = document.querySelector('.main-content');
mainEl.style.top = -scrollPosition + 'px';
document.body.classList.add('show-overlay');
}
function removeOverlay() {
document.body.classList.remove('show-overlay');
window.scrollTo(0, scrollPosition);
const mainEl = document.querySelector('.main-content');
mainEl.style.top = 0;
}
.main-content {
background-image: repeating-linear-gradient( lime, blue 103px);
width: 100%;
height: 200vh;
}
.show-overlay .main-content {
position: fixed;
left: 0;
right: 0;
overflow-y: scroll; /* render disabled scroll bar to keep the same width */
/* Suggestion to put: overflow-y: hidden;
Disabled scrolling still makes a mess with its width. Hiding it does the trick. */
}
.overlay {
display: none;
position: fixed;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
background: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3);
overflow: auto;
}
.show-overlay .overlay {
display: block;
}
.overlay-content {
margin: 50px;
background-image: repeating-linear-gradient( grey, grey 20px, black 20px, black 40px);
height: 120vh;
}
.toggle {
position: fixed;
top: 5px;
left: 15px;
padding: 10px;
background: red;
}
/* reset CSS */
body {
margin: 0;
}
<main class="main-content"></main>
<div class="overlay">
<div class="overlay-content"></div>
</div>
<button class="toggle">Overlay</button>
Don't use overflow: hidden; on body. It automatically scrolls everything to the top. There's no need for JavaScript either. Make use of overflow: auto;. This solution even works with mobile Safari:
HTML Structure
<div class="overlay">
<div class="overlay-content"></div>
</div>
<div class="background-content">
lengthy content here
</div>
Styling
.overlay{
position: fixed;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
right: 0px;
bottom: 0px;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.8);
.overlay-content {
height: 100%;
overflow: scroll;
}
}
.background-content{
height: 100%;
overflow: auto;
}
See the demo here and source code here.
Update:
For people who want keyboard space bar, page up/down to work: you need to focus on the overlay, e.g., clicking on it, or manually JS focusing on it before this part of the div will respond to keyboard. Same with when the overlay is "switched off", since it's just moving the overlay to the side. Otherwise to browser, these are just two normal divs and it wouldn't know why it should focus on any one of them.
It is worth noting that sometimes adding "overflow:hidden" to the body tag doesn't do the job. In those cases, you'll have to add the property to the html tag as well.
html, body {
overflow: hidden;
}
The behaviour you want to prevent is called scroll chaining. To disable it, set
overscroll-behavior: contain;
on your overlay in CSS.
You can easily do this with some "new" css and JQuery.
Initially: body {... overflow:auto;}
With JQuery you can dynamically switch between 'overlay' and 'body'. When on 'body', use
body {
position: static;
overflow: auto;
}
When on 'overlay' use
body {
position: sticky;
overflow: hidden;
}
JQuery for the switch('body'->'overlay'):
$("body").css({"position": "sticky", "overflow": "hidden"});
JQuery for the switch('overlay'->'body'):
$("body").css({"position": "static", "overflow": "auto"});
if anyone is looking for a solution for React function components, you can put this inside the modal component:
useEffect(() => {
document.body.style.overflowY = 'hidden';
return () =>{
document.body.style.overflowY = 'auto';
}
}, [])
Generally speaking, if you want a parent (the body in this case) to prevent it from scrolling when a child (the overlay in this case) scrolls, then make the child a sibling of the parent to prevent the scroll event from bubbling up to the parent. In case of the parent being the body, this requires an additional wrapping element:
<div id="content">
</div>
<div id="overlay">
</div>
See Scroll particular DIV contents with browser's main scrollbar to see its working.
The chosen answer is correct, but has some limitations:
Super hard "flings" with your finger will still scroll <body> in the background
Opening the virtual keyboard by tapping an <input> in the modal will direct all future scrolls to <body>
I don't have a fix for the first issue, but wanted to shed some light on the second. Confusingly, Bootstrap used to have the keyboard issue documented, but they claimed it was fixed, citing http://output.jsbin.com/cacido/quiet as an example of the fix.
Indeed, that example works fine on iOS with my tests. However, upgrading it to the latest Bootstrap (v4) breaks it.
In an attempt to figure out what the difference between them was, I reduced a test case to no longer depend on Bootstrap, http://codepen.io/WestonThayer/pen/bgZxBG.
The deciding factors are bizarre. Avoiding the keyboard issue seems to require that background-color is not set on the root <div> containing the modal and the modal's content must be nested in another <div>, which can have background-color set.
To test it, uncomment the below line in the Codepen example:
.modal {
position: fixed;
top: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
z-index: 2;
display: none;
overflow: hidden;
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
/* UNCOMMENT TO BREAK */
/* background-color: white; */
}
For touch devices, try adding a 1px wide, 101vh min-height transparent div in the wrapper of the overlay. Then add -webkit-overflow-scrolling:touch; overflow-y: auto; to the wrapper. This tricks mobile safari into thinking the overlay is scrollable, thus intercepting the touch event from the body.
Here's a sample page. Open on mobile safari: http://www.originalfunction.com/overlay.html
https://gist.github.com/YarGnawh/90e0647f21b5fa78d2f678909673507f
I found this question trying to solve issue I had with my page on Ipad and Iphone - body was scrolling when I was displaying fixed div as popup with image.
Some answers are good, however none of them solved my issue. I found following blog post by Christoffer Pettersson. Solution presented there helped issue I had with iOS devices and it helped my scrolling background problem.
Six things I learnt about iOS Safari's rubber band scrolling
As it was suggested I include major points of the blog post in case link gets outdated.
"In order to disable that the user can scroll the background page while the "menu is open", it is possible to control what elements should be allowed to be scrolled or not, by applying some JavaScript and a CSS class.
Based on this Stackoverflow answer you can control that elements with the disable-scrolling should not
perform their default scroll action when the touchmove event is triggered."
document.ontouchmove = function ( event ) {
var isTouchMoveAllowed = true, target = event.target;
while ( target !== null ) {
if ( target.classList && target.classList.contains( 'disable-scrolling' ) ) {
isTouchMoveAllowed = false;
break;
}
target = target.parentNode;
}
if ( !isTouchMoveAllowed ) {
event.preventDefault();
}
};
And then put the disable-scrolling class on the page div:
<div class="page disable-scrolling">
Simple inline styling for the body tag:
<body style="position: sticky; overflow: hidden;">
If the intent is to disable on mobile/ touch devices then the most straightforward way to do it is using touch-action: none;.
Example:
const app = document.getElementById('app');
const overlay = document.getElementById('overlay');
let body = '';
for (let index = 0; index < 500; index++) {
body += index + '<br />';
}
app.innerHTML = body;
app.scrollTop = 200;
overlay.innerHTML = body;
* {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
html,
body {
height: 100%;
}
#app {
background: #f00;
position: absolute;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
overflow-y: scroll;
line-height: 20px;
}
#overlay {
background: rgba(0,0,0,.5);
position: fixed;
top: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
height: 100%;
padding: 0 0 0 100px;
overflow: scroll;
}
<div id='app'></div>
<div id='overlay'></div>
(The example does not work in the context of Stack Overflow. You will need to recreate it in a stand-alone page.)
If you want to disable scrolling of the #app container, just add touch-action: none;.
I'd like to add to previous answers because I tried to do that, and some layout broke as soon as I switched the body to position:fixed. In order to avoid that, I had to also set body's height to 100% :
function onMouseOverOverlay(over){
document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0].style.overflowY = (over?"hidden":"scroll");
document.getElementsByTagName("html")[0].style.position = (over?"fixed":"static");
document.getElementsByTagName("html")[0].style.height = (over?"100%":"auto");
}
Use the following HTML:
<body>
<div class="page">Page content here</div>
<div class="overlay"></div>
</body>
Then JavaScript to intercept and stop scrolling:
$(".page").on("touchmove", function(event) {
event.preventDefault()
});
Then to get things back to normal:
$(".page").off("touchmove");
In my case, none of these solutions worked out on iPhone (iOS 11.0).
The only effective fix that is working on all my devices is this one - ios-10-safari-prevent-scrolling-behind-a-fixed-overlay-and-maintain-scroll-position
try this
var mywindow = $('body'), navbarCollap = $('.navbar-collapse');
navbarCollap.on('show.bs.collapse', function(x) {
mywindow.css({visibility: 'hidden'});
$('body').attr("scroll","no").attr("style", "overflow: hidden");
});
navbarCollap.on('hide.bs.collapse', function(x) {
mywindow.css({visibility: 'visible'});
$('body').attr("scroll","yes").attr("style", "");
});
One solution for a React functional component is to use the useEffect hook.
Here's the code example bellow (pay attention to the useEffect definition):
import {useEffect, useRef} from "react";
export default function PopoverMenu({className, handleClose, children}) {
const selfRef = useRef(undefined);
useEffect(() => {
const isPopoverOpenned = selfRef.current?.style.display !== "none";
const focusedElement = document?.activeElement;
const scrollPosition = {x: window.scrollX, y: window.scrollY};
if (isPopoverOpenned) {
preventDocBodyScrolling();
} else {
restoreDocBodyScrolling();
}
function preventDocBodyScrolling() {
const width = document.body.clientWidth;
const hasVerticalScrollBar = (window.innerWidth > document.documentElement.clientWidth);
document.body.style.overflowX = "hidden";
document.body.style.overflowY = hasVerticalScrollBar ? "scroll" : "";
document.body.style.width = `${width}px`;
document.body.style.position = "fixed";
}
function restoreDocBodyScrolling() {
document.body.style.overflowX = "";
document.body.style.overflowY = "";
document.body.style.width = "";
document.body.style.position = "";
focusedElement?.focus();
window.scrollTo(scrollPosition.x, scrollPosition.y);
}
return () => {
restoreDocBodyScrolling(); // cleanup on unmount
};
}, []);
return (
<>
<div
className="backdrop"
onClick={() => handleClose && handleClose()}
/>
<div
className={`pop-over-menu${className ? (` ${className}`) : ""}`}
ref={selfRef}
>
<button
className="pop-over-menu--close-button" type="button"
onClick={() => handleClose && handleClose()}
>
X
</button>
{children}
</div>
</>
);
}
Originally posted on this other related Stackoverflow question: https://stackoverflow.com/a/69016517/14131330
CSS
.noScroll {
overflow: hidden;
}
Javascript
<script>
function toggleNav() {
document.body.classList.toggle("noScroll");
}
</script>
Button
<button onclick="toggleNav()">
Toggle Nav
</button>
If you want to stop body/html scroll add as the following
CSS
html, body {
height: 100%;
}
.overlay{
position: fixed;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
right: 0px;
bottom: 0px;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.8);
.overlay-content {
height: 100%;
overflow: scroll;
}
}
.background-content{
height: 100%;
overflow: auto;
}
HTML
<div class="overlay">
<div class="overlay-content"></div>
</div>
<div class="background-content">
lengthy content here
</div>
Basically, you could do it without JS.
The main idea is to add html/body with height: 100% and overflow: auto.
and inside your overlay, you could either enable/disable scroll based on your requirement.
Hope this helps!
Use below code for disabling and enabling scroll bar.
Scroll = (
function(){
var x,y;
function hndlr(){
window.scrollTo(x,y);
//return;
}
return {
disable : function(x1,y1){
x = x1;
y = y1;
if(window.addEventListener){
window.addEventListener("scroll",hndlr);
}
else{
window.attachEvent("onscroll", hndlr);
}
},
enable: function(){
if(window.removeEventListener){
window.removeEventListener("scroll",hndlr);
}
else{
window.detachEvent("onscroll", hndlr);
}
}
}
})();
//for disabled scroll bar.
Scroll.disable(0,document.body.scrollTop);
//for enabled scroll bar.
Scroll.enable();

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