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AngularJS directive to make elements stick when scrolling down.Features:Allows use of an offset so elements can be stuck to eg. 50px from the top of the browserRecalculates element position on page load and on window resizeClean: No external CSS or jQuery required, and it only adds the classes you specify.

Plugins

Documentation

Angular Sticky

A simple, pure javascript (No jQuery required!) AngularJS directive to make elements stick when scrolling down.

Features

  • Allows use of an offset so elements can be stuck to eg. 50px from the top of the browser
  • Recalculates element position on page load and on window resize
  • Clean: No external CSS or jQuery required, and it only adds the classes you specify.

Bower

Install with bower:

bower install ngSticky

Usage

Include the .js file in your page then enable usage of the directive by including the "sticky" module as a dependency. Use the directive as follows:

<div sticky> Hey there! </div>

To toggle the element stickiness you can bind with scope using the disabled-sticky (ng-model) as follows {{ disabled = true }}:

   <div sticky disabled-sticky="disabled"> I won't stick! </div>    <div sticky disabled-sticky="!disabled"> I will stick! </div>

To make the element stick within a certain offset of the top of the screen, you can provide an offset as follows:

    <div sticky offset="100"> I won't touch the top of your screen! </div>

By default the element will be replaced with a place holder to prevent DOM resizing. This can be disabled as follows:

    <div sticky use-placeholder="false">I won't be replaced!</div>

If you want to customize the style while the element is sticky, we have an api for you too:

    <div sticky offset="100" sticky-class="imSoSticky"> Taste my glue! </div>

And if you want to customize the body style while the element is sticky:

    <div sticky offset="100" body-class="somethingIsSticky"> Taste my glue! </div>

And if you want to add in a class when the element is confined and bottomed out:

    <div sticky offset="100" bottom-class="cantGoAnyFurther"> Taste my glue! </div>

It's also possible to set styles specifically for non sticky element:

    <div sticky unsticky-class="container--unsticky"></div>

In order to enable sticky based on a media query:

    <div sticky media-query="min-width: 768px"> Won't be sticky on small screens! </div>

If you want the sticky element to be scrollable only if it's smaller then the window inner height then you can set the stick-limit attribute:

    <div sticky offset="100" stick-limit="true"> Will stick only if the element isn't bigger then the view</div>

And if you want to confine an element to its parent, and let it 'bottom out', just add the confine attribute:

    <div sticky offset="100" confine="true"> Will unstick and stick to bottom of parent element</div>

NOTE: The confine attribute will automagically assign its parent a position: relative style in order to help with absolute positioning relative to the parent.

If you'd like to use an element's overflow-y instead of the window scrollbar. You can use the "sticky-scroll" element to denote an element styled to handle this.

    <sticky-scroll style="overflow-y: scroll;min-height: 1000px;display: block;">       <div sticky>Will stick to element, instead of window scrollbar.</div>     </sticky-scroll>

NOTE: This doesn't work for bottomed out or position absolute elements.

Development

To start the development server:

npm run examples // Then go to localhost:8080

To create the minified dist/sticky.min.js file, run:

npm run build

Cheers.


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