react-visibility-sensor-mod
v3.6.3
Published
Sensor component for React that notifies you when it goes in or out of the window viewport.
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React Visibility Sensor
Sensor component for React that notifies you when it goes in or out of the window viewport.
Install
npm install react-visibility-sensor
Including the script directly
Useful if you want to use with bower, or in a plain old <script> tag.
In this case, make sure that React and ReactDOM are already loaded and globally accessible.
- Plain: https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/visibility-sensor.js
- Minified https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/visibility-sensor.min.js
Take a look at the umd example to see this in action
Example
To run the example locally:
npm run build-example- open
example/index.htmlin a browser
General usage goes something like:
function render () {
var VisibilitySensor = require('react-visibility-sensor');
var onChange = function (isVisible) {
console.log('Element is now %s', isVisible ? 'visible' : 'hidden');
};
return (
<VisibilitySensor onChange={onChange} />
);
}Props
onChange: callback for whenever the element changes from being within the window viewport or not. Function is called with 1 argument(isVisible: boolean)active: (defaulttrue) boolean flag for enabling / disabling the sensor. Whenactive !== truethe sensor will not fire theonChangecallback.partialVisibility: (defaultfalse) consider element visible if only part of it is visible. Also possible values are - 'top', 'right', 'bottom', 'left' - in case it's needed to detect when one of these become visible explicitly.minTopValue: (default0) consider element visible if only part of it is visible and a minimum amount of pixels could be set, so if at least 100px are in viewport, we mark element as visible.intervalCheck: (defaulttrue) the default usage of Visibility Sensor is to trigger a check on user scrolling, by checking this as true, it gives you the possibility to check if the element is in view even if it wasn't because of a user scrollintervalDelay: (default1500) integer, number of milliseconds between checking the element's position in relation the the window viewport. Making this number too low will have a negative impact on performance.scrollCheck: (default:false) by making this true, the scroll listener is enabled.scrollDelay: (default:250) is the debounce rate at which the check is triggered. Ex: 250ms after the user stopped scrolling.containment: (optional) element to use as a viewport when checking visibility. Default behaviour is to use the browser window as viewport.delayedCall: (defaultfalse) if is set to true, wont execute on page load ( prevents react apps triggering elements as visible before styles are loaded )
It's possible to use both intervalCheck and scrollCheck together. This means you can detect most visibility changes quickly with scrollCheck, and an intervalCheck with a higher intervalDelay will act as a fallback for other visibility events, such as resize of a container.
Thanks
Special thanks to contributors:
License
MIT

