Issue
I'm not sure the best way to ask/search for this question:
When you click on an anchor link, it brings you to that section of the page with the linked-to area now at the VERY TOP of the page. I would like the anchor link to send me to that part of the page, but I would like some space at the top. As in, I don't want it to send me to the linked-to part with it at the VERY TOP, I would like 100 or so pixels of space there.
Does this make sense? Is this possible?
Edited to show code - it's just an anchor tag:
<a href="#anchor">Click me!</a>
<p id="anchor">I should be 100px below where I currently am!</p>
Solution
window.addEventListener("hashchange", function () {
window.scrollTo(window.scrollX, window.scrollY - 100);
});
This will allow the browser to do the work of jumping to the anchor for us and then we will use that position to offset from.
EDIT 1:
As was pointed out by @erb, this only works if you are on the page while the hash is changed. Entering the page with a #something
already in the URL does not work with the above code. Here is another version to handle that:
// The function actually applying the offset
function offsetAnchor() {
if(location.hash.length !== 0) {
window.scrollTo(window.scrollX, window.scrollY - 100);
}
}
// This will capture hash changes while on the page
window.addEventListener("hashchange", offsetAnchor);
// This is here so that when you enter the page with a hash,
// it can provide the offset in that case too. Having a timeout
// seems necessary to allow the browser to jump to the anchor first.
window.setTimeout(offsetAnchor, 1); // The delay of 1 is arbitrary and may not always work right (although it did in my testing).
NOTE:
To use jQuery, you could just replace window.addEventListener
with $(window).on
in the examples. Thanks @Neon.
EDIT 2:
As pointed out by a few, the above will fail if you click on the same anchor link two or more times in a row because there is no hashchange
event to force the offset.
This solution is very slightly modified version of the suggestion from @Mave and uses jQuery selectors for simplicity
// The function actually applying the offset
function offsetAnchor() {
if (location.hash.length !== 0) {
window.scrollTo(window.scrollX, window.scrollY - 100);
}
}
// Captures click events of all <a> elements with href starting with #
$(document).on('click', 'a[href^="#"]', function(event) {
// Click events are captured before hashchanges. Timeout
// causes offsetAnchor to be called after the page jump.
window.setTimeout(function() {
offsetAnchor();
}, 0);
});
// Set the offset when entering page with hash present in the url
window.setTimeout(offsetAnchor, 0);
JSFiddle for this example is here
Answered By - Eric Olson
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