element: The element which the user will be sliding side to side
dragger: The element which the user will be using to slide the target element side to side
disable: String, set to 'left' or 'right' to disable the respective side
addBodyClasses: Add classes to the body to signify which side is being opened
hyperextensible: If false, pane may not be slide past the minPosition and maxPosition
resistance: The cooeficcient used to slow sliding when user has passed max or min threshold
flickThreshold: Number of pixels the user needs to swiftly travel to activate a "flick" open
transitionSpeed: The speed at which the pane slides open or closed
easing: The CSS3 Easing method you want to use for transitions
maxPosition: Maximum number of pixels the pane may be slid to the right
minPosition: Maximum number of pixels the pane may be slid to the left
tapToClose: If true, tapping an open pane will close it
touchToDrag: If true, dragging the target settings.element will open/close the pane
minDragDistance: The minimum amount of pixels the user needs to drag within the slideIntent degrees to move the pane
slideIntent: The number of degrees the user must initiate sliding in towards the left or right (see diagram below)
Notes on Slide Intent: The slide intent is an int between 0 and 90, and represents the degrees in the first quadrant of a circle that you would like to have mirrored on the X and Y axis. For example, if you have 40 set as your slideIntent value, the user would only be able to slide the pane by dragging in the blue area in the diagram below. Once intent has been defined, it will not change until the user releases.
The available methods to hook into are as follows:
start: Fired when touching down on the draggable pane and it begins to move
drag: Fired when the pane has been moved or slid
end: Fired when the pane has been let go of
animating: Fired when the pane is animating
animated: Fired when the pane is finished it's animations
ignore: Fired when trying to drag the pane but ended up dragging on an ignored element
close: Fired when close is called directly or if tapToClose is set to true
open: Fired when the menu is opened
expandLeft: Fired on expand('left')
expandRight: Fired on expand('right')
enable: Fired on enable
disable: Fired on disable
off: Removes an event hook
snapper.off('drag');
The event names listed above apply for the off method.
settings: Updates the settings for an already instantiated object
snapper.settings({yourSettings});
Currently, settings.element, settings.touchToDrag cannot be updated. To update the element, instantiate a new object. To allow listening to a drag, use snapper.enable()
state: Returns detailed information about the state of the pane
vardata=snapper.state();
The data returned from the state method will look like the following:
{state: "closed",// State of the Paneinfo:{opening: "left",// Side which user intends to opentowards: "right",// Direction user is dragging towardshyperExtending: false,// True if user is pulling past predefined boundshalfway: false,// True if pane is at least halfway openflick: false,// True if user has moved pane X amount of pixels in the open/close direction without changing directionstranslation:{absolute: 20,// Pixels pane has translatedrelative: 21,// Pixels pane has translated relative to starting translationsinceDirectionChange: 10,// Pixels pane has translated since the direction of the pane has changedpercentage: 40.571649// The percentage that the Pane is open. Good or animating other things}}}
Gotchas
Layout
The layout itself is what most people will have a hard time emulating, so the simplest approach I have found is as follows:
Two absolute elements, one to represent all the content, and another to represent all the drawers. The content has a higher z-index than the drawers. Within the drawers element, it's direct children should represent the containers for the drawers, these should be fixed or absolute. Assigning classes to your drawers to specify which side it is on is recommended. All absolutely positioned elements should have 0 for top, left, right, bottom properties, excluding your panes which will have auto set to their respective sides and a width assigned. The width of your drawers is usually the same number you want to use for minPosition and maxPosition
Because of the nature of this code, drawers are just kind of stacked behind the content. To bring the proper drawer to the front, you can hook into Snaps.js' CSS classes:
With addBodyClasses set to true in your initialize options, one of the two classess will be added to the body tag: .snapjs-left or .snapjs-right, depending on which pane is being open, respectively. This being said, you can apply your CSS like the following to show the proper drawers:
Toggles have been a popular request, but rather than bog the library down with additional methods, you can utilize the powerful API of Snap.js to create your own toggle. Toggles can be done like the following:
- How do I disable Snap.js dragging for my touch slider?
Snap.js supports cascading cancellation of events via a data attribute data-snap-ignore. If you were to use a slider, your markup might look like the following:
All interactions on children elements of the element with the data-snap-ignore attribute will have their Snap.js events ignored.
- I am using Push.js from Ratchet, I keep losing my events on my elements, how can I fix this?
Simple. As wack as Push.js is (yes, it is in desperate need of attention as of v1.0.0), we can still solve this problem with it's only callback, 'push'.
// The function that will initialize your Snap.js instancevardoSnap=function(){if(window.snapper){// Snap.js already exists, we just need to re-bind eventswindow.snapper.enable();}else{// Initialize Snap.jswindow.snapper=newSnap({element: document.getElementById('content')});}};window.addEventListener('push',doSnap);doSnap();
- Snap.js works on my Android device but i cannot scroll the content in my drawers, what gives?
Older Android devices (and iPhone as well) do not have native support for overflow scrolling. To solve this, you may use the wonderful library called iScroll
- transform: translate3d() breaks my fixed child elements, how can I solve this?
This is a problem with Chromium and should be fixed soon. I would advise not having your direct children element set to fixed, that may possibly solve your problem.
- I am experiencing a weird flicker when the CSS transform is applied
To solve the flicker, apply the following CSS to the element in question
#content{
backface-visibility:hidden;
-webkit-backface-visibility:hidden; /* Chrome and Safari */-moz-backface-visibility:hidden; /* Firefox */-ms-backface-visibility:hidden; /* Internet Explorer 10+ */
}
Compliments
This code attempts to make your webapp's feel more "native". These other repos go well with it, too!
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