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ipad safari: disable scrolling, and bounce effect?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-04-12 20:35 出处:网络
I\'m working on a browser based app, currently I\'m developing and styling for the ipad safari browser.

I'm working on a browser based app, currently I'm developing and styling for the ipad safari browser.

I'm looking for two things on the ipad: How can I disable vertica开发者_高级运维l scrolling for pages that don't require it? & how can I disable the elastic bounce effect?


This answer is no longer applicable, unless you are developing for a very old iOS device... Please see other solutions


2011 answer: For a web/html app running inside iOS Safari you want something like

document.ontouchmove = function(event){
    event.preventDefault();
}

For iOS 5 you may want to take the following into account: document.ontouchmove and scrolling on iOS 5

Update September 2014: A more thorough approach can be found here: https://github.com/luster-io/prevent-overscroll. For that and a whole lot of useful webapp advice, see http://www.luster.io/blog/9-29-14-mobile-web-checklist.html

Update March 2016: That last link is no longer active - see https://web.archive.org/web/20151103001838/http://www.luster.io/blog/9-29-14-mobile-web-checklist.html for the archived version instead. Thanks @falsarella for pointing that out.


You can also change the position of the body/html to fixed:

body,
html {
  position: fixed;
}


To prevent scrolling on modern mobile browsers you need to add the passive: false. I had been pulling my hair out getting this to work until I found this solution. I have only found this mentioned in one other place on the internet.

function preventDefault(e){
    e.preventDefault();
}

function disableScroll(){
    document.body.addEventListener('touchmove', preventDefault, { passive: false });
}
function enableScroll(){
    document.body.removeEventListener('touchmove', preventDefault);
}


You can use this jQuery code snippet to do this:

$(document).bind(
      'touchmove',
          function(e) {
            e.preventDefault();
          }
);

This will block the vertical scrolling and also any bounce back effect occurring on your pages.


overflow: scroll;
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;

On container you can set bounce effect inside element

Source: http://www.kylejlarson.com/blog/2011/fixed-elements-and-scrolling-divs-in-ios-5/


I know this is slightly off-piste but I've been using Swiffy to convert Flash into an interactive HTML5 game and came across the same scrolling issue but found no solutions that worked.

The problem I had was that the Swiffy stage was taking up the whole screen, so as soon as it had loaded, the document touchmove event was never triggered.

If I tried to add the same event to the Swiffy container, it was replaced as soon as the stage had loaded.

In the end I solved it (rather messily) by applying the touchmove event to every DIV within the stage. As these divs were also ever-changing, I needed to keep checking them.

This was my solution, which seems to work well. I hope it's helpful for anyone else trying to find the same solution as me.

var divInterval = setInterval(updateDivs,50);
function updateDivs(){
$("#swiffycontainer > div").bind(
    'touchmove',
     function(e) {
        e.preventDefault();
    }
);}


Code to To remove ipad safari: disable scrolling, and bounce effect

   document.addEventListener("touchmove", function (e) {
        e.preventDefault();
    }, { passive: false });

If you have canvas tag inside document, sometime it will affect the usability of object inside Canvas(example: movement of object); so add below code to fix it.

    document.getElementById("canvasId").addEventListener("touchmove", function (e) {
        e.stopPropagation();
    }, { passive: false });


none of the solutions works for me. This is how I do it.

  html,body {
      position: fixed;
      overflow: hidden;
    }
  .the_element_that_you_want_to_have_scrolling{
      -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
  }


Try this JS sollutuion:

var xStart, yStart = 0; 

document.addEventListener('touchstart', function(e) {
    xStart = e.touches[0].screenX;
    yStart = e.touches[0].screenY;
}); 

document.addEventListener('touchmove', function(e) {
    var xMovement = Math.abs(e.touches[0].screenX - xStart);
    var yMovement = Math.abs(e.touches[0].screenY - yStart);
    if((yMovement * 3) > xMovement) {
        e.preventDefault();
    }
});

Prevents default Safari scrolling and bounce gestures without detaching your touch event listeners.


Tested in iphone. Just use this css on target element container and it will change the scrolling behaviour, which stops when finger leaves the screen.

-webkit-overflow-scrolling: auto

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/-webkit-overflow-scrolling


improved answer @Ben Bos and commented by @Tim

This css will help prevent scrolling and performance issue with css re-render because position changed / little lagging without width and height

html,
body {
  position: fixed;
  width: 100%; 
  height: 100%
}


For those who are using MyScript the Web App and are struggling with the body scrolling/dragging (on iPad and Tablets) instead of actually writing:

<body touch-action="none" unresolved>

That fixed it for me.


You can use js for prevent scroll:

let body = document.body;

let hideScroll = function(e) {
  e.preventDefault();
};

function toggleScroll (bool) {

  if (bool === true) {
    body.addEventListener("touchmove", hideScroll);
  } else {
    body.removeEventListener("touchmove", hideScroll);
  }
}

And than just run/stop toggleScroll func when you opnen/close modal.

Like this toggleScroll(true) / toggleScroll(false)

(This is only for iOS, on Android not working)


Try this JS solution that toggles webkitOverflowScrolling style. The trick here is that this style is off, mobile Safari goes to ordinary scrolling and prevents over-bounce — alas, it is not able to cancel ongoing drag. This complex solution also tracks onscroll as bounce over the top makes scrollTop negative that may be tracked. This solution was tested on iOS 12.1.1 and has single drawback: while accelerating the scroll single over-bounce still happens as resetting the style may not cancel it immediately.

function preventScrollVerticalBounceEffect(container) {
  setTouchScroll(true) //!: enable before the first scroll attempt

  container.addEventListener("touchstart", onTouchStart)
  container.addEventListener("touchmove", onTouch, { passive: false })
  container.addEventListener("touchend", onTouchEnd)
  container.addEventListener("scroll", onScroll)

  function isTouchScroll() {
    return !!container.style.webkitOverflowScrolling
  }

  let prevScrollTop = 0, prevTouchY, opid = 0

  function setTouchScroll(on) {
    container.style.webkitOverflowScrolling = on ? "touch" : null

    //Hint: auto-enabling after a small pause makes the start
    // smoothly accelerated as required. After the pause the
    // scroll position is settled, and there is no delta to
    // make over-bounce by dragging the finger. But still,
    // accelerated content makes short single over-bounce
    // as acceleration may not be off instantly.

    const xopid = ++opid
    !on && setTimeout(() => (xopid === opid) && setTouchScroll(true), 250)

    if(!on && container.scrollTop < 16)
      container.scrollTop = 0
    prevScrollTop = container.scrollTop
  }

  function isBounceOverTop() {
    const dY = container.scrollTop - prevScrollTop
    return dY < 0 && container.scrollTop < 16
  }

  function isBounceOverBottom(touchY) {
    const dY = touchY - prevTouchY

    //Hint: trying to bounce over the bottom, the finger moves
    // up the screen, thus Y becomes smaller. We prevent this.

    return dY < 0 && container.scrollHeight - 16 <=
      container.scrollTop + container.offsetHeight
  }

  function onTouchStart(e) {
    prevTouchY = e.touches[0].pageY
  }

  function onTouch(e) {
    const touchY = e.touches[0].pageY

    if(isBounceOverBottom(touchY)) {
      if(isTouchScroll())
        setTouchScroll(false)
      e.preventDefault()
    }

    prevTouchY = touchY
  }

  function onTouchEnd() {
    prevTouchY = undefined
  }

  function onScroll() {
    if(isTouchScroll() && isBounceOverTop()) {
      setTouchScroll(false)
    }
  }
}


Consider the following architecture:

<body> <div id="root"></div> </body>

this css will work:

#root { position: fixed; height: 100%; overflow: auto; }


css overscroll-behavior is now supported in iOS 16. If you are targeting > iOS 16 devices, to prevent elastic bounce effect, add the following CSS to the html root

html {
  overscroll-behavior: none;
}

Please note, the solution provided only disables elastic bounce effect when content is larger than viewport.

If you also want to completely disable scrolling in main page on iOS devices, use

html body {
   overflow: hidden;
}


For those of you who don't want to get rid of the bouncing but just to know when it stops (for example to start some calculation of screen distances), you can do the following (container is the overflowing container element):

    const isBouncing = this.container.scrollTop < 0 ||
    this.container.scrollTop + this.container.offsetHeight >
        this.container.scrollHeight


Disable safari bounce scrolling effect:

html,
body {
  height: 100%;
  width: 100%;
  overflow: auto;
  position: fixed;
}  


I had an issue with grabbing the html element in the background, when a menu with scroll was open and either at the top or at the bottom at the scroll height. I tried lots of things. Setting html position to fixed was the closest I got to lock the screen, but in the PWA it resulted in a white area at the bottom, that I couldn't fix. Finally I've found a solution, that worked for me

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