Get div's offsetTop positions in React

JavaScripter picture JavaScripter · Sep 19, 2015 · Viewed 121.1k times · Source

I am trying to implement a List view in React. What I am trying to achieve is that to store the list headers informations and register the components and register the scroll event. every time when user scroll the window, I'd like to take out the stored div and re-calculate the offsetTop data.

The problem now is that, I found the console just print out the initial value (the value is fixed and never changed) offsetTop data never change in onscroll function.

Anyone suggest how to get latest offsetTop from the _instances object?

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import ListHeader from './lib/ListHeader';
import ListItems from './lib/ListItems';

const styles = {
  'height': '400px',
  'overflowY': 'auto',
  'outline': '1px dashed red',
  'width': '40%'
};

class HeaderPosInfo {
  constructor(headerObj, originalPosition, originalHeight) {
    this.headerObj = headerObj;
    this.originalPosition = originalPosition;
    this.originalHeight = originalHeight; 
  }
}

export default class ReactListView extends Component {
  static defaultProps = {
    events: ['scroll', 'mousewheel', 'DOMMouseScroll', 'MozMousePixelScroll', 'resize', 'touchmove', 'touchend'],
    _instances:[],
    _positionMap: new Set(),
    _topPos:'',
    _topWrapper:''
  }

  static propTypes = {
    data: React.PropTypes.array.isRequired,
    headerAttName: React.PropTypes.string.isRequired,
    itemsAttName: React.PropTypes.string.isRequired,
    events: React.PropTypes.array,
    _instances: React.PropTypes.array,
    _positionMap: React.PropTypes.object,
    _topPos: React.PropTypes.string,
    _topWrapper: React.PropTypes.object
  };

  state = {
    events: this.props.events,
    _instances: this.props._instances,
    _positionMap: this.props._positionMap,
    _topPos: this.props._topPos
  }

  componentDidMount() {
    this.initStickyHeaders();
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {

  }

  componentDidUpdate() {

  }

  refsToArray(ctx, prefix){
    let results = [];
    for (let i=0;;i++){
      let ref = ctx.refs[prefix + '-' + String(i)];
      if (ref) results.push(ref);
      else return results;
    }
  }

  initHeaderPositions() {
    // Retrieve all instance of headers and store position info
    this.props._instances.forEach((k)=>{
      this.props._positionMap.add(new HeaderPosInfo(
          k, 
          k.refs.header.getDOMNode().offsetTop,
          k.refs.header.getDOMNode().offsetHeight
        ));
    });
    let it = this.props._positionMap.values();
    let first = it.next();
    this.props._topPos = first.value.originalPosition;
    this.props._topWrapper = first.value.headerObj;
  }

  initStickyHeaders () {
    this.props._instances = this.refsToArray(this, 'ListHeader');
    this.initHeaderPositions();

    // Register events listeners with the listview div
    this.props.events.forEach(type => {
      if (window.addEventListener) {
        React.findDOMNode(this.refs.listview).addEventListener(type, this.onScroll.bind(this), false);
      } else {
        React.findDOMNode(this.refs.listview).attachEvent('on' + type, this.onScroll.bind(this), false);
      }
    });
  }

  onScroll() {

    // update current header positions and apply fixed positions to the top one
    console.log(1);
    let offsetTop  = React.findDOMNode(this.props._instances[0].refs.header).offsetTop;

  }

  render() {
    const { data, headerAttName, itemsAttName } = this.props;
    let _refi = 0;
    let makeRef = () => {
      return 'ListHeader-' + (_refi++);
    };

    return (
      <div ref="listview" style={styles}>
      {
        Object.keys(data).map(k => {
        const header = data[k][headerAttName];
        const items  = data[k][itemsAttName];
          return (
            <ul key={k}>     
              <ListHeader ref={makeRef()} header={header} />
              <ListItems  items={items} />
            </ul>
          );
        })
      }
      </div>
    );
  }
}

The whole source code is on Github, you can clone and compile it from here:

Github

Answer

Eugene Tiurin picture Eugene Tiurin · Sep 23, 2015

You may be encouraged to use the Element.getBoundingClientRect() method to get the top offset of your element. This method provides the full offset values (left, top, right, bottom, width, height) of your element in the viewport.

Check the John Resig's post describing how helpful this method is.