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jQuery - bind event on Scroll Stop

If i want to bind an event on page scrolling i can use scroll(); .

But how to fire when scroll() is ended up?

I would like to reproduce this:

   $(window).scroll(function(){
    //do somenthing
    });

    $(window).scrollSTOPPED(function(){  //--> when i'm scrolling then i stop to scrolling (so NOT when page scrollbar is at the end top or bottom :)
    //do somenthing else
    });

any ideas?

tiny jquery way

$.fn.scrollStopped = function(callback) {
  var that = this, $this = $(that);
  $this.scroll(function(ev) {
    clearTimeout($this.data('scrollTimeout'));
    $this.data('scrollTimeout', setTimeout(callback.bind(that), 250, ev));
  });
};

After 250 ms from the last scroll event, this will invoke the "scrollStopped" callback.

http://jsfiddle.net/wtRrV/256/

lodash (even smaller)

function onScrollStopped(domElement, callback) {
  domElement.addEventListener('scroll', _.debounce(callback, 250));
}

http://jsfiddle.net/hotw1o2j/

pure js (technically the smallest)

function onScrollStopped(domElement, callback, timeout = 250) {
  domElement.addEventListener('scroll', () => {
    clearTimeout(callback.timeout);
    callback.timeout = setTimeout(callback, timeout);
  });
}

https://jsfiddle.net/kpsxdcv8/15/

strange fact

clearTimeout and clearInterval params don't have to be defined and can even be wrong types or even omitted.

http://jsfiddle.net/2w5zLwvx/

the event itself doesn't exist as scroll is a single event fired everytime the user scrolls by a certain increment.

What you can do however is emulate the event.

Credit to James Padolsey for this, lifted from his webpage:. Read it here to fully understand the code and how it is implemented.

http://james.padolsey.com/javascript/special-scroll-events-for-jquery/

(function(){

 var special = jQuery.event.special, uid1 = 'D' + (+new Date()), uid2 = 'D' + (+new Date() + 1); special.scrollstart = { setup: function() { var timer, handler = function(evt) { var _self = this, _args = arguments; if (timer) { clearTimeout(timer); } else { evt.type = 'scrollstart'; jQuery.event.handle.apply(_self, _args); } timer = setTimeout( function(){ timer = null; }, special.scrollstop.latency); }; jQuery(this).bind('scroll', handler).data(uid1, handler); }, teardown: function(){ jQuery(this).unbind( 'scroll', jQuery(this).data(uid1) ); } }; special.scrollstop = { latency: 300, setup: function() { var timer, handler = function(evt) { var _self = this, _args = arguments; if (timer) { clearTimeout(timer); } timer = setTimeout( function(){ timer = null; evt.type = 'scrollstop'; jQuery.event.handle.apply(_self, _args); }, special.scrollstop.latency); }; jQuery(this).bind('scroll', handler).data(uid2, handler); }, teardown: function() { jQuery(this).unbind( 'scroll', jQuery(this).data(uid2) ); } }; })(); 

Probably worth noting that there are several questions related to yours, so this may be a possible duplication. eg Javascript: do an action after user is done scrolling and Fire event after scrollling scrollbars or mousewheel with javascript

You can verify if window.scrollY == 0

$(window).scroll(function(){
  if (window.scrollY == 0) {
    //...
  }
});

But this event will be fired at every scroll.

I prefer to be able to listen on a event. This is what I do:

The jquery plugin:

+function(jQuery){
        var scrollStopEventEmitter = function(element, jQuery) {
            this.scrollTimeOut = false;
            this.element       = element;
            jQuery(element).on('scroll', $.proxy(this.onScroll, this));
        }

        scrollStopEventEmitter.prototype.onScroll = function() 
        {
            if (this.scrollTimeOut != false) {
              clearTimeout(this.scrollTimeOut);
            }

            var context = this;

            this.scrollTimeOut = setTimeout(function(){ context.onScrollStop()}, 250);
        }

        scrollStopEventEmitter.prototype.onScrollStop = function() 
        {
            this.element.trigger('scrollStop');
        }

        jQuery.fn.scrollStopEventEmitter = function(jQuery) {   
            return new scrollStopEventEmitter(this, jQuery);
        };

    }($);

In this case, window will now trigger scrollStop event

$(window).scrollStopEventEmitter($);

Now I can listen on scrollStop

$(window).on('scrollStop',function(){
        // code

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