I currently use $(window).bind(\'scroll\', foo);
to monitor $(window).scrollTop()
and do stuff to create a parallax effect.
In all desktop brow
This could be a bug with jQuery itself: http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/6446
That ticket has been open for a while and pertains to iOS 4, but perhaps you should investigate calculating the scroll position with pure javascript.
I highly recommend using the "Skrollr" javascript library. It is by far the best mobile scrolling animation option that I've found to date and is very easy to get up and running quickly. Create animations and manipulate CSS based on a start and end scroll position. Create as many data scroll positions and animations as you need for most standard CSS properties.
In the following example the background color would animate over the course of a 500 pixel scroll:
<div data-0="background-color:rgb(0,0,255);" data-500="background-color:rgb(255,0,0);">WOOOT</div>
Checkout the repository on Git: https://github.com/Prinzhorn/skrollr
Skrollr Demo Example: http://prinzhorn.github.io/skrollr/
Awesome real world example: http://www.fontwalk.de/03/
When I saw your question, I was planning to do a polyfill for this (if such does not exist?). Unfortunately I've had very little time.
The idea is to have a setInterval
, which is initiated ontouchstart
, and it checks whether document.body.scrollTop
has changed since last time, eg. for every 20 milliseconds. And if it is, then we manually dispatch the scroll event. Otherwise we clearInterval
since apparently there's no more scrolling happening.
This it would be in brief. If you got more time (than I do), then feel free to try with those guidelines.
Edit: Now, reading further, the same idea is seems to be suggested on the other answer. Are you certain that intervals are stopped whilst scrolling on iPad?
As I know there is no javascript execution while scrolling on the most mobile devices. There are some workarounds (f.e. iscroll) out there. Iscroll is using css-technique "transform". But there is no way to execute javascript while scrolling. I suppose the smoothe scrolling-algorithm is too expensive.
While this isn't possible out of the box, so to speak, you can do it using iscroll
So, you'd use iScroll for iOS and Android mobile devices / tablets, and use the way you're currently doing it for desktop devices.
iScroll has a bunch of options for callback functions to be called on certain events - such as 'onScrollMove', 'onBeforeScrollEnd', 'onTouchEnd', etc. Unfortunately, there's not an option to execute a callback on "EVERY position change, including changes cause by the momentum of scrolling after the user has stoped touching the screen". But, it's easy enough to add one.
In the iScroll source, around line 127, near the "//Events" comment, add a new variable:
onPosChange: null
Then, around line 308, at the end of the "_pos" function, add this line:
if (this.options.onPosChange) this.options.onPosChange.call();
(that will just call the function passed in the "onPosChange" option, if it exists).
Having done that, the following example code will set up iScroll for the div with id="iscroll_container", and will print the Y-offset to the console each time it changes:
var myScroll;
function loaded() {
myScroll = new iScroll('iscroll_container', { onPosChange: actOnScroll });
}
document.addEventListener('touchmove', function (e) { e.preventDefault(); }, false);
//Use this for high compatibility (iDevice + Android)
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () { setTimeout(loaded, 200); }, false);
function actOnScroll(){
console.log('got a scroll move! Vert offset is: ' + myScroll.y);
}
Note, Ben the Bodyguard Parallax Site works on iPad by using iScroll (they use a much older version of iscroll and don't do it exactly the way I described here)
Also, Life of Pi Parallax Site works on iPad really nicely - I can't figure out how they do it, but at least it proves it's possible!
Apple's webpage for iPhone 5c uses some parallax scrolling effects that seem to continue with your finger still touching the screen and scrolling. So I guess javascript can't be entirely disabled during scroll. Tumult Hype provides this functionality too.