Using arrow keys with jQuery scrollTo

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忘掉有多难
忘掉有多难 2020-12-11 09:57

I have successfully implemented the scrollTo jQuery plugin which scrolls to the next div with the class \"new\" when a link is clicked. However, I would also like to be able

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  • 2020-12-11 10:26

    You need to capture the keypress event and decide which keycode was pressed

    $(document).keypress(function(e) {
        switch(e.keyCode) { 
            case 37:
                //left arrow pressed
            break;
            case 39:
                //right arrow pressed
            break;
        }
    });
    
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  • 2020-12-11 10:35

    Just for giving more idea, working with arrays.

    var panel_arr = new Array();
    $(document).ready(function(e) {
    
        $('.parallax-panel-wrapper').each(function(i, element){ 
            panel_arr.push( $(this).attr("id") );
        });
    
        var current_parallax_panel_no   = 0;
        $(document).keydown(function (evt) {
            if (evt.keyCode == 40) { // down arrow
                evt.preventDefault(); // prevents the usual scrolling behaviour
                if(current_parallax_panel_no < (panel_arr.length-1)) current_parallax_panel_no++;
                scrollByArrowKeys(1);               
            } else if (evt.keyCode == 38) { // up arrow
                evt.preventDefault(); // prevents the usual scrolling behaviour
                if(current_parallax_panel_no >= 1) current_parallax_panel_no--;
                scrollByArrowKeys(0); 
            }
        });
    
        function scrollByArrowKeys(add_more){
            scrollToThis = (($("#" + panel_arr[current_parallax_panel_no]).offset().top)  + add_more ; // get element top
            $.scrollTo(scrollToThis, 800);      
        }
    
    });
    
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  • 2020-12-11 10:44

    You can use the keydown event listener to listen for keypresses. You can use this on &lt;input&gt; fields and the like. Because keydown events bubble up the DOM, you can use it on the document object to catch any keypress on the page:

    $(function () {
      $(document).keydown(function (evt) {
        alert("Key pressed: " + evt.keyCode);
      });
    });
    

    Each keypress has a code. If you use the code above in your web page, you'll see that the key code for the down arrow is 40. You can solo this out using an if or switch statement in the handler:

    jQuery(function () {
    
      $(document).keydown(function (evt) {
        if (evt.keyCode == 40) { // down arrow
          alert("You pressed down.");
        }
      });
    
    });
    

    Now you need to bind in the code that actually jumps to the next heading. I recommend abstracting the code out into a function so you can use it for both keypresses and clicks. Here is the function, together with a variant of your original code that uses it:

    // Here is the function:
    
    function scrollToNew () {
      scrollTop = $(window).scrollTop();
      $('.new').each(function(i, h2){ // loop through article headings
        h2top = $(h2).offset().top; // get article heading top
        if (scrollTop < h2top) { // compare if document is below heading
          $.scrollTo(h2, 800); // scroll to in .8 of a second
          return false; // exit function
        }
      });
    }
    
    // Here is your original code, modified to use the function:
    
    jQuery(function () {
    
      $("#next").click(scrollToNew);
    
    });
    

    Finally, you can add in the keypress code and call the function from there:

    function scrollToNew () {
      scrollTop = $(window).scrollTop();
      $('.new').each(function(i, h2){ // loop through article headings
        h2top = $(h2).offset().top; // get article heading top
        if (scrollTop < h2top) { // compare if document is below heading
          $.scrollTo(h2, 800); // scroll to in .8 of a second
          return false; // exit function
        }
      });
    }
    
    jQuery(function () {
    
      $("#next").click(scrollToNew);
    
      $(document).keydown(function (evt) {
        if (evt.keyCode == 40) { // down arrow
          evt.preventDefault(); // prevents the usual scrolling behaviour
          scrollToNew(); // scroll to the next new heading instead
        }
      });
    
    });
    

    Update: To scroll upwards, do two things. Change the keydown handler to:

      $(document).keydown(function (evt) {
        if (evt.keyCode == 40) { // down arrow
          evt.preventDefault(); // prevents the usual scrolling behaviour
          scrollToNew(); // scroll to the next new heading instead
        } else if (evt.keyCode == 38) { // up arrow
          evt.preventDefault();
          scrollToLast();
        }
      }
    

    and write a scrollToLast() function based off of scrollToNew() that finds the last new heading that isn't on the page:

    function scrollToLast () {
      scrollTop = $(window).scrollTop();
    
      var scrollToThis = null;
    
      // Find the last element with class 'new' that isn't on-screen:
      $('.new').each(function(i, h2) {
        h2top = $(h2).offset().top;
        if (scrollTop > h2top) {
          // This one's not on-screen - make a note and keep going:
          scrollToThis = h2;
        } else {
          // This one's on-screen - the last one is the one we want:
          return false;
        }
      });
    
      // If we found an element in the loop above, scroll to it:
      if(scrollToThis != null) {
        $.scrollTo(scrollToThis, 800);
      }
    }
    
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