I've encountered similar problems before and could never really understand the workarounds, and so I ended up relying on plugins like iScroll. This is such simple task that I refuse to include a plugin for it - what I want is to prevent horizontal scroll in iOS. This includes the rubber band effect for any content that might be on the page but that isn't visible.
From what I understand I need to disable the rubber band altogether first and then apply the touch scroll to a container element (which I've given the id "touch"). Not sure if this is the right approach?
$(document).bind('touchmove', function(e) {
if (!e.target == '#touch') {
e.preventDefault();
}
});
Style for #touch
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
overflow: hidden;
height: 100%;
@media only screen and (max-width: 768px) {
width: 768px;
}
This doesn't prevent the horizontal width from staying at 728px however, the user is still able to scroll and see the hidden content. Ideas?
Well, the above metas are useful as such:
<meta content="yes" name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" />
<meta content="minimum-scale=1.0, width=device-width, maximum-scale=1, user-scalable=no" name="viewport" />
They prevent that bug in Safari that happens when the user rotates the screen. However, the most proper way to accomplish the desired functionality is:
Use a parent div with overflow hidden and make sure the height of this div is limited according to the viewport and a child div with overflow:auto or the css 3 overflow-y:scroll. So basically if the size of the content inside the child div exceeds the default size of the child, you can vertically/horizontally scroll through it. Because the parent has overflow:hidden, the content outside of the child will not be displayed, so you get a proper scroll effect. ** Also, if you use overflow: hidden and prevent default for all touchEvents, there will be no scrolling or weird browser behavior**
With the help of JavaScript, make sure that every element in the DOM is scaled according to the viewport, so avoid using static sizes for as many elements as possible.
Bind the touchStart, touchMove and touchEnd events. Safari doesn't always fire a touchEnd event unless a touchMove event is listened for as well. Even if it's just a placeholder, put it there to avoid the inconsistent behavior in Safari.
Horizontal sliding is possible in two ways: load new content in the same div after you detect the slide direction or populate that child div with all the elements and you are good to go and actually shifting the margins/position of the child inside it's parent to 'scroll'. Animation can be used for a slicker interface.
Bind your touch event listeners. I don't know what library or event management system you are using, but it doesn't matter. Just call the respective function for the respective task.
var slideBeginX;
function touchStart(event){event.preventDefault();//always prevent default Safari actions
slideBeginX = event.targetTouches[0].pageX;
};
function touchMove(event) {
event.preventDefault();
// whatever you want to add here
};
function touchEnd(event) {
event.preventDefault();
var slideEndX = event.changedTouches[0].pageX;
// Now add a minimum slide distance so that the links on the page are still clickable
if (Math.abs(slideEndX - slideBeginX) > 200) {
if (slideEndX - slideBeginX > 0) {
// It means the user has scrolled from left to right
} else {
// It means the user has scrolled from right to left.
};
};
};