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web design

jQuery custom content scroller

jQuery custom content scroller

Highly customizable custom scrollbar jQuery plugin. Features include vertical and/or horizontal scrollbar(s), adjustable scrolling momentum, mouse-wheel (via jQuery mousewheel plugin), keyboard and touch support, ready-to-use themes and customization via CSS, RTL direction support, option parameters for full control of scrollbar functionality, methods for triggering actions like scroll-to, update, destroy etc., user-defined callbacks and more.

Current version 3.1.5 (Changelog)
Upgrading from version 2

When upgrading from version 2.x to 3.x it’s important to use version 3 CSS and .png files. Version 3 is backwards compatible but it’s also a huge overhaul. One significant change is that you don’t need to call the update method manually (the script does it automatically). For more info see changelog.

Version 2 is still maintained and updated here.


How to use it

Get started by downloading the archive which contains the plugin files (and a large amount of HTML demos and examples). Extract and upload jquery.mCustomScrollbar.concat.min.js, jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css and mCSB_buttons.png to your web server (alternatively you can load plugin files from a CDN).

Instead of hosting the plugin files on your web server, you can load them directly from a CDN like jsdelivr, Github etc.

  • jsdelivr versioned/minified
    • //cdn.jsdelivr.net/jquery.mcustomscrollbar/3.0.6/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.concat.min.js
    • //cdn.jsdelivr.net/jquery.mcustomscrollbar/3.0.6/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.min.css
    • //cdn.jsdelivr.net/jquery.mcustomscrollbar/3.0.6/mCSB_buttons.png
  • Github latest/minified
    • //malihu.github.io/custom-scrollbar/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.concat.min.js
    • //malihu.github.io/custom-scrollbar/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.min.css
    • //malihu.github.io/custom-scrollbar/mCSB_buttons.png


HTML

Include jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css in the head tag your HTML document (more info)

jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css contains the styling of the custom scrollbar and themes. It should normally be included in the head tag of your html (typically before any script tags). If you wish to reduce http requests and/or have all your website stylesheet in a single file, you should move/copy scrollbars styling in your main CSS document.

mCSB_buttons.png contains all the button arrows (up, down, left and right) as image sprites for all scrollbar themes. The plugin archive contains the PSD source (source-files/mCSB_buttons.psd) so you can change them or add your own. This file should be in the same directory with plugin stylesheet.


<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css" />

Include jQuery library (if your project doesn’t use it already) and jquery.mCustomScrollbar.concat.min.js in the head tag or at the very bottom of your document, just before the closing body tag

Some frameworks and CMS include jQuery library in the head tag to make sure it’s loaded when other scripts request it. Usually, including .js files on the bottom of the HTML document (just before the closing body tag) is recommended for better performance. In any case, jQuery must be included first, before plugin scripts.


<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="/path/to/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.concat.min.js"></script>

CSS

The element(s) you want to add scrollbar(s) should have the typical CSS properties of an overflowed block which are a height (or max-height) value, an overflow value of auto (or hidden) and content long enough to require scrolling. For horizontal scrollbar, the element should have a width (or max-width) value set.

If you prefer to set your element’s height/width via javascript, you can use the setHeight/setWidth option parameters.

Initialization

Initialize via javascript

After files inclusion, call mCustomScrollbar function on the element selector you want to add the scrollbar(s)

<script>
    (function($){
        $(window).on("load",function(){
            $(".content").mCustomScrollbar();
        });
    })(jQuery);
</script>

more info

The code is wrapped in (function($){ ... })(jQuery);. This ensures no conflict between jQuery and other libraries using $ shortcut (see Avoiding Conflicts with Other Libraries for more info). The plugin function is called in $(window).on("load") so it executes after all page elements (like images) are loaded.

You can change the function selector ".content" to any selector you want (an element id, class name, js variable etc.). For instance, if you want custom scrollbars to apply on the element with id content-1, you simply do:

$("#content-1").mCustomScrollbar();

You may also have multiple selectors by inserting comma separated values

$(".content,#content-1").mCustomScrollbar();

The above code adds custom scrollbars to a)every element with class name content and b)the element with id content-1.

Additionally, you may want to call mCustomScrollbar multiple times within a page in order to set different options (configuration and option parameters explained below) for each selector

<script>
  (function($){
    $(window).on("load",function(){
      $("#vertical-content").mCustomScrollbar({
        theme:"light-3",
        scrollButtons:{
          enable:true
        }
      });
      $("#horizontal-content").mCustomScrollbar({
        axis:"x",
        theme:"3d"
      });
    });
  })(jQuery);
</script>

Initialize via HTML

Add the class mCustomScrollbar to any element you want to add custom scrollbar(s) with default options. Optionally, set its axis via the HTML data attribute data-mcs-axis (e.g. "x" for horizontal and "y" for vertical) and its theme via data-mcs-theme. For example:

<div class="mCustomScrollbar" data-mcs-theme="dark">
  <!-- your content -->
</div>

Basic configuration & option parameters

axis

By default, the script applies a vertical scrollbar. To add a horizontal or 2-axis scrollbars, invoke mCustomScrollbar function with the axis option set to "x" or "yx" respectively

$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    axis:"x" // horizontal scrollbar
});
$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    axis:"yx" // vertical and horizontal scrollbar
});

theme

To quickly change the appearance of the scrollbar, set the theme option parameter to any of the ready-to-use themes available in jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css, for example:

$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    theme:"dark"
});

Configuration

You can configure your scrollbar(s) using the following option parameters on mCustomScrollbar function
Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar({ option: value });

setWidth: false
Set the width of your content (overwrites CSS width), value in pixels (integer) or percentage (string).
setHeight: false
Set the height of your content (overwrites CSS height), value in pixels (integer) or percentage (string).
setTop: 0
Set the initial css top property of content, accepts string values (css top position).
Example: setTop: "-100px".
setLeft: 0
Set the initial css left property of content, accepts string values (css left position).
Example: setLeft: "-100px".
axis: "string"
Define content’s scrolling axis (the type of scrollbars added to the element: vertical and/of horizontal).
Available values: "y", "x", "yx".

  • axis: "y" – vertical scrollbar (default)
  • axis: "x" – horizontal scrollbar
  • axis: "yx" – vertical and horizontal scrollbars
scrollbarPosition: "string"
Set the position of scrollbar in relation to content.
Available values: "inside", "outside".
Setting scrollbarPosition: "inside" (default) makes scrollbar appear inside the element. Setting scrollbarPosition: "outside" makes scrollbar appear outside the element. Note that setting the value to "outside" requires your element (or parent elements) to have CSS position: relative (otherwise the scrollbar will be positioned in relation to document’s root element).
scrollInertia: integer
Set the amount of scrolling momentum as animation duration in milliseconds.
Higher value equals greater scrolling momentum which translates to smoother/more progressive animation. Set to 0 to disable.
autoDraggerLength: boolean
Enable or disable auto-adjusting scrollbar dragger length in relation to scrolling amount (same bahavior with browser’s native scrollbar).
Set autoDraggerLength: false when you want your scrollbar to (always) have a fixed size.
autoHideScrollbar: boolean
Enable or disable auto-hiding the scrollbar when inactive.
Setting autoHideScrollbar: true will hide the scrollbar(s) when scrolling is idle and/or cursor is out of the scrolling area.
Please note that some special themes like “minimal” overwrite this option.
autoExpandScrollbar: boolean
Enable or disable auto-expanding the scrollbar when cursor is over or dragging the scrollbar.
alwaysShowScrollbar: integer
Always keep scrollbar(s) visible, even when there’s nothing to scroll.

  • alwaysShowScrollbar: 0 – disable (default)
  • alwaysShowScrollbar: 1 – keep dragger rail visible
  • alwaysShowScrollbar: 2 – keep all scrollbar components (dragger, rail, buttons etc.) visible
snapAmount: integer
Make scrolling snap to a multiple of a fixed number of pixels. Useful in cases like scrolling tabular data, image thumbnails or slides and you need to prevent scrolling from stopping half-way your elements. Note that your elements must be of equal width or height in order for this to work properly.
To set different values for vertical and horizontal scrolling, use an array: [y,x]
snapOffset: integer
Set an offset (in pixels) for the snapAmount option. Useful when for example you need to offset the snap amount of table rows by the table header.
mouseWheel:{ enable: boolean }
Enable or disable content scrolling via mouse-wheel.
mouseWheel:{ scrollAmount: integer }
Set the mouse-wheel scrolling amount (in pixels). The default value "auto" adjusts scrolling amount according to scrollable content length.
mouseWheel:{ axis: "string" }
Define the mouse-wheel scrolling axis when both vertical and horizontal scrollbars are present.
Set axis: "y" (default) for vertical or axis: "x" for horizontal scrolling.
mouseWheel:{ preventDefault: boolean }
Prevent the default behaviour which automatically scrolls the parent element when end or beginning of scrolling is reached (same bahavior with browser’s native scrollbar).
mouseWheel:{ deltaFactor: integer }
Set the number of pixels one wheel notch scrolls. The default value “auto” uses the OS/browser value.
mouseWheel:{ normalizeDelta: boolean }
Enable or disable mouse-wheel (delta) acceleration. Setting normalizeDelta: true translates mouse-wheel delta value to -1 or 1.
mouseWheel:{ invert: boolean }
Invert mouse-wheel scrolling direction. Set to true to scroll down or right when mouse-wheel is turned upwards.
mouseWheel:{ disableOver: [array] }
Set the tags that disable mouse-wheel when cursor is over them.
Default value:
["select","option","keygen","datalist","textarea"]
scrollButtons:{ enable: boolean }
Enable or disable scrollbar buttons.
scrollButtons:{ scrollAmount: integer }
Set the buttons scrolling amount (in pixels). The default value "auto" adjusts scrolling amount according to scrollable content length.
scrollButtons:{ scrollType: "string" }
Define the buttons scrolling type/behavior.

  • scrollType: "stepless" – continuously scroll content while pressing the button (default)
  • scrollType: "stepped" – each button click scrolls content by a certain amount (defined in scrollAmount option above)
scrollButtons:{ tabindex: integer }
Set a tabindex value for the buttons.
keyboard:{ enable: boolean }
Enable or disable content scrolling via the keyboard.
The plugin supports the directional arrows (top, left, right and down), page-up (PgUp), page-down (PgDn), Home and End keys.
keyboard:{ scrollAmount: integer }
Set the keyboard arrows scrolling amount (in pixels). The default value "auto" adjusts scrolling amount according to scrollable content length.
keyboard:{ scrollType: "string" }
Define the keyboard arrows scrolling type/behavior.

  • scrollType: "stepless" – continuously scroll content while pressing the arrow key (default)
  • scrollType: "stepped" – each key release scrolls content by a certain amount (defined in scrollAmount option above)
contentTouchScroll: integer
Enable or disable content touch-swipe scrolling for touch-enabled devices.
To completely disable, set contentTouchScroll: false.
Integer values define the axis-specific minimum amount required for scrolling momentum (default: 25).
documentTouchScroll: boolean
Enable or disable document touch-swipe scrolling for touch-enabled devices.
advanced:{ autoExpandHorizontalScroll: boolean }
Auto-expand content horizontally (for "x" or "yx" axis).
If set to true, content will expand horizontally to accommodate any floated/inline-block elements.
Setting its value to 2 (integer) forces the non scrollHeight/scrollWidth method. A value of 3 forces the scrollHeight/scrollWidth method.
advanced:{ autoScrollOnFocus: "string" }
Set the list of elements/selectors that will auto-scroll content to their position when focused.
For example, when pressing TAB key to focus input fields, if the field is out of the viewable area the content will scroll to its top/left position (same bahavior with browser’s native scrollbar).
To completely disable this functionality, set autoScrollOnFocus: false.
Default:
"input,textarea,select,button,datalist,keygen,a[tabindex],area,object,[contenteditable='true']"
advanced:{ updateOnContentResize: boolean }
Update scrollbar(s) automatically on content, element or viewport resize.
The value should be true (default) for fluid layouts/elements, adding/removing content dynamically, hiding/showing elements etc.
advanced:{ updateOnImageLoad: boolean }
Update scrollbar(s) automatically each time an image inside the element is fully loaded.
Default value is auto which triggers the function only on "x" and "yx" axis (if needed).
The value should be true when your content contains images and you need the function to trigger on any axis.
advanced:{ updateOnSelectorChange: "string" }
Update scrollbar(s) automatically when the amount and size of specific selectors changes.
Useful when you need to update the scrollbar(s) automatically, each time a type of element is added, removed or changes its size.
For example, setting updateOnSelectorChange: "ul li" will update scrollbars each time list-items inside the element are changed.
Setting the value to true, will update scrollbars each time any element is changed.
To disable (default) set to false.
advanced:{ extraDraggableSelectors: "string" }
Add extra selector(s) that’ll release scrollbar dragging upon mouseup, pointerup, touchend etc.
Example: extraDraggableSelectors: ".myClass, #myID"
advanced:{ releaseDraggableSelectors: "string" }
Add extra selector(s) that’ll allow scrollbar dragging upon mousemove/up, pointermove/up, touchend etc.
Example: releaseDraggableSelectors: ".myClass, #myID"
advanced:{ autoUpdateTimeout: integer }
Set the auto-update timeout in milliseconds.
Default timeout: 60
theme: "string"
Set the scrollbar theme.
View all ready-to-use themes
All themes are contained in plugin’s CSS file (jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css).
Default theme: "light"
callbacks:{
      onCreate: function(){}
}
A function to call when plugin markup is created.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onCreate:function(){
      console.log("Plugin markup generated");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onInit: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrollbars have initialized (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    onInit:function(){
      console.log("Scrollbars initialized");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onScrollStart: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrolling starts (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    onScrollStart:function(){
      console.log("Scrolling started...");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onScroll: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrolling is completed (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    onScroll:function(){
      console.log("Content scrolled...");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      whileScrolling: function(){}
}
A function to call while scrolling is active (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    whileScrolling:function(){
      console.log("Scrolling...");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onTotalScroll: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrolling is completed and content is scrolled all the way to the end (bottom/right) (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    onTotalScroll:function(){
      console.log("Scrolled to end of content.");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onTotalScrollBack: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrolling is completed and content is scrolled back to the beginning (top/left) (demo).
Example:
callbacks:{
    onTotalScrollBack:function(){
      console.log("Scrolled back to the beginning of content.");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onTotalScrollOffset: integer
}
Set an offset for the onTotalScroll option.
For example, setting onTotalScrollOffset: 100 will trigger the onTotalScroll callback 100 pixels before the end of scrolling is reached.
callbacks:{
      onTotalScrollBackOffset: integer
}
Set an offset for the onTotalScrollBack option.
For example, setting onTotalScrollBackOffset: 100 will trigger the onTotalScrollBack callback 100 pixels before the beginning of scrolling is reached.
callbacks:{
      alwaysTriggerOffsets: boolean
}
Set the behavior of calling onTotalScroll and onTotalScrollBack offsets.
By default, callback offsets will trigger repeatedly while content is scrolling within the offsets.
Set alwaysTriggerOffsets: false when you need to trigger onTotalScroll and onTotalScrollBack callbacks once, each time scroll end or beginning is reached.
callbacks:{
      onOverflowY: function(){}
}
A function to call when content becomes long enough and vertical scrollbar is added.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onOverflowY:function(){
      console.log("Vertical scrolling required");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onOverflowX: function(){}
}
A function to call when content becomes wide enough and horizontal scrollbar is added.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onOverflowX:function(){
      console.log("Horizontal scrolling required");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onOverflowYNone: function(){}
}
A function to call when content becomes short enough and vertical scrollbar is removed.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onOverflowYNone:function(){
      console.log("Vertical scrolling is not required");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onOverflowXNone: function(){}
}
A function to call when content becomes narrow enough and horizontal scrollbar is removed.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onOverflowXNone:function(){
      console.log("Horizontal scrolling is not required");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onBeforeUpdate: function(){}
}
A function to call right before scrollbar(s) are updated.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onBeforeUpdate:function(){
      console.log("Scrollbars will update");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onUpdate: function(){}
}
A function to call when scrollbar(s) are updated.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onUpdate:function(){
      console.log("Scrollbars updated");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onImageLoad: function(){}
}
A function to call each time an image inside the element is fully loaded and scrollbar(s) are updated.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onImageLoad:function(){
      console.log("Image loaded");
    }
}
callbacks:{
      onSelectorChange: function(){}
}
A function to call each time a type of element is added, removed or changes its size and scrollbar(s) are updated.
Example:
callbacks:{
    onSelectorChange:function(){
      console.log("Scrollbars updated");
    }
}
live: "string"
Enable or disable applying scrollbar(s) on all elements matching the current selector, now and in the future.
Set live: true when you need to add scrollbar(s) on elements that do not yet exist in the page. These could be elements added by other scripts or plugins after some action by the user takes place (e.g. lightbox markup may not exist untill the user clicks a link).
If you need at any time to disable or enable the live option, set live: "off" and "on" respectively.
You can also tell the script to disable live option after the first invocation by setting live: "once".
liveSelector: "string"
Set the matching set of elements (instead of the current selector) to add scrollbar(s), now and in the future.

Plugin methods

Ways to execute various plugin actions programmatically from within your script(s).

update

Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar("update");

Call the update method to manually update existing scrollbars to accommodate new content or resized element(s). This method is by default called automatically by the script (via updateOnContentResize option) when the element itself, its content or scrollbar size changes.

view examples

/* initialize plugin with auto-update options disabled */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar({
  advanced:{
    updateOnContentResize: false,
    updateOnImageLoad: false
  }
});

/* at some point in your js script/code update scrollbar manually */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("update");

scrollTo

Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",position,options);

Call the scrollTo method to programmatically scroll the content to the position parameter (demo).

position parameter

Position parameter can be:

  • "string"
    • e.g. element selector: "#element-id"
    • e.g. special pre-defined position: "bottom"
    • e.g. number of pixels less/more: "-=100"/"+=100"
  • integer
    • e.g. number of pixels: 100
  • [array]
    • e.g. different y/x position: [100,50]
  • object/function
    • e.g. jQuery object: $("#element-id")
    • e.g. js object: document.getelementbyid("element-id")
    • e.g. function: function(){ return 100; }

Pre-defined position strings:

  • "bottom" – scroll to bottom
  • "top" – scroll to top
  • "right" – scroll to right
  • "left" – scroll to left
  • "first" – scroll to the position of the first element within content
  • "last" – scroll to the position of the last element within content

view examples

Scroll to element with id “#el-1″

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","#el-1");

Scroll to top

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","top");

Scroll by 100 pixels down or right

var val=100;
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","-="+val);

Scroll by 100 pixels up or left

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","+=100");

Scroll by 100 pixels down and by 50 pixels right

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",["-=100","-=50"]);

Scroll to the fifth paragraph

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",$("p:eq(4)"));

Scroll to the last element within your content

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","last");

Scroll to some variable value

var val=document.getelementbyid("element-id");
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",val);

Scroll to 300 pixels

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",300);

Method options

scrollInertia: integer
Scroll-to duration, value in milliseconds.
Example:
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","bottom",{
    scrollInertia:3000
});
scrollEasing: "string"
Scroll-to animation easing, values: "linear", "easeOut", "easeInOut".
Example:
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","bottom",{
    scrollEasing:"easeOut"
});
moveDragger: boolean
Scroll scrollbar dragger (instead of content).
Example:
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo",80,{
    moveDragger:true
});
timeout: integer
Set a timeout for the method (the default timeout is 60 ms in order to work with automatic scrollbar update), value in milliseconds.
Example:
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","top",{
    timeout:1000
});
callbacks: boolean
Trigger user defined callbacks after scroll-to completes.
Example:
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","left",{
    callbacks:false
});

stop

Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar("stop");

Stops any running scrolling animations (usefull when you wish to interupt a previously scrollTo method call).

disable

Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar("disable");

Calling disable method will temporarily disable the scrollbar (demo). Disabled scrollbars can be re-enable by calling the update method.

To disable the scrollbar and reset its content position, set the method’s reset parameter to true

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("disable",true);

view examples

/* initialize plugin */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar();

/* at some point in your js script/code disable scrollbar */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("disable");

/* re-enable scrollbar as needed */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("update");

destroy

Usage $(selector).mCustomScrollbar("destroy");

Calling destroy method will completely remove the custom scrollbar and return the element to its original state (demo).

view examples

/* initialize plugin */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar();

/* at some point in your js script/code destroy scrollbar */
$(selector).mCustomScrollbar("destroy");

Scrollbar styling & themes

You can design and visually customize your scrollbars with pure CSS, using jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css which contains the default/basic styling and all scrollbar themes.

The easiest/quickest way is to select a ready-to-use scrollbar theme. For example:

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar({
  theme:"dark"
});

View all ready-to-use themes

You can modify the default styling or any theme either directly in jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css or by overwriting the CSS rules in another stylesheet.

Creating a new scrollbar theme

Create a name for your theme (e.g. “my-theme”) and set it as the value of the theme option

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar({
    theme:"my-theme"
});

Your element will get the class “mCS-my-theme” (your theme-name with “mCS” prefix), so you can create your CSS using the .mCS-my-theme in your rules. For instance:

.mCS-my-theme.mCSB_scrollTools .mCSB_dragger .mCSB_dragger_bar{ background-color: red; }
.mCS-my-theme.mCSB_scrollTools .mCSB_draggerRail{ background-color: white; } 
/* and so on... */

In the same manner you can clone any existing theme (e.g. “dark”), change its selector (e.g. .mCS-dark) to your own theme name (e.g. .mCS-my-theme) and modify its CSS rules.

Scrollbar markup

The plugin applies specific id (unique) and/or classes to every scrollbar element/component, meaning that you can target and modify any scrollbar in more than one ways.

For example, every element with a scrollbar gets a unique class in the form of _mCS_1, _mCS_2 etc. Every scrollbar container element gets a unique id in the form of mCSB_1_scrollbar_vertical, mCSB_2_scrollbar_vertical etc. Every scrollbar dragger gets a unique id in the form of mCSB_1_dragger_vertical, mCSB_2_dragger_vertical etc. in addition to the class mCSB_dragger. All these mean that you can do stuff like:

._mCS_1 .mCSB_dragger .mCSB_dragger_bar{ background-color: red; }

._mCS_2 .mCSB_dragger .mCSB_dragger_bar{ background-color: green; }

#mCSB_3_dragger_vertical .mCSB_dragger_bar{ background-color: blue; }

#mCSB_1_scrollbar_vertical .mCSB_dragger{ height: 100px; }

#mCSB_1_scrollbar_horizontal .mCSB_dragger{ width: 100px; }

.mCSB_1_scrollbar .mCSB_dragger .mCSB_draggerRail{ width: 4px; }

Custom scrollbar layout

User-defined callbacks

You can trigger your own js function(s) by calling them inside mCustomScrollbar callbacks option parameter

$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    callbacks:{
        onScroll:function(){
            myCustomFn(this);
        }
    }
});

function myCustomFn(el){
    console.log(el.mcs.top);
}

In the example above, each time a scroll event ends and content has stopped scrolling, the content’s top position will be logged in browser’s console. There are available callbacks for each step of the scrolling event:

  • onScrollStart – triggers the moment a scroll event starts
  • whileScrolling – triggers while scroll event is running
  • onScroll – triggers when a scroll event completes
  • onTotalScroll – triggers when content has scrolled all the way to bottom or right
  • onTotalScrollBack – triggers when content has scrolled all the way back to top or left

You can set an offset value (pixels) for both onTotalScroll and onTotalScrollBack by setting onTotalScrollOffset and onTotalScrollBackOffset respectively (view example).

The following will trigger the callback function when content has scrolled to bottom minus 100 pixels

$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    callbacks:{
        onTotalScroll:function(){
            console.log("scrolled to bottom");
        },
    onTotalScrollOffset:100
    }
});

By default, onTotalScroll and onTotalScrollBack callbacks are triggered repeatedly. To prevent multiple calls when content is within their offset, set alwaysTriggerOffsets option to false (view example).

$(".content").mCustomScrollbar({
    callbacks:{
        onTotalScroll:function(){
            console.log("scrolled to bottom");
        },
    onTotalScrollOffset:100,
    alwaysTriggerOffsets:false
    }
});

Additional callbacks:

Returning values

The script returns a number of values and objects related to scrollbar that you can use in your own functions

  • this – the original element containing the scrollbar(s)
  • this.mcs.content – the original content wrapper as jquery object
  • this.mcs.top – content’s top position (pixels)
  • this.mcs.left – content’s left position (pixels)
  • this.mcs.draggerTop – scrollbar dragger’s top position (pixels)
  • this.mcs.draggerLeft – scrollbar dragger’s left position (pixels)
  • this.mcs.topPct – content vertical scrolling percentage
  • this.mcs.leftPct – content horizontal scrolling percentage
  • this.mcs.direction – content’s scrolling direction (y or x)

view examples

Load more content when scrolled to bottom

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar({
    callbacks:{
        onTotalScroll:function(){
            this.mcs.content.append("...");
        }
    }
});

Run code when at least half of the content is scrolled

$(selector).mCustomScrollbar({
    callbacks:{
        whileScrolling:function(){
            var pct=this.mcs.topPct;
            if(pct>=50){
              /* do something... */
            }
        }
    }
});

Plugin-specific jQuery expressions

$("#myID:mcsInView")
Select element(s) in your content that are within scrollable viewport.
As condition: $("#myID").is(":mcsInView");
$(".content:mcsOverflow")
Select overflowed element(s) with visible scrollbar.
As condition: $(".content").is(":mcsOverflow");
$("#myID:mcsInSight")
$("#myID:mcsInSight(exact)")
Select element(s) in your content that are in view of the scrollable viewport. Using the exact parameter will include elements that have any part of them (even 1 pixel) in view of the scrollable viewport.
As condition: $("#myID").is(":mcsInSight");, $("#myID").is(":mcsInSight(exact)");

Plugin dependencies & requirements

License

This work is released under the MIT License.
You are free to use, study, improve and modify it wherever and however you like.
https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT

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5,627 Comments

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Comments pages: 1 18 19 20 21 22 85

  1. Jennifer
    Posted on October 1, 2012 at 12:00 Permalink

    Hello. Thank you for the excellent script. I’m using it horizontally to display a large number of images:

    http://www.jennsportfolio.com/#section_2

    Is there a way for the entire thing (including images) to scale responsively? Right now I have the width at 100% and the height hard-coded.

    Reply
  2. isuru
    Posted on September 29, 2012 at 22:12 Permalink

    Nice article. Apart from the cool plugin, I learned something important from this which is how to have a fallback on jQuery files loading. That’s pretty neat. Thanks 🙂

    Reply
  3. Natxo
    Posted on September 29, 2012 at 21:07 Permalink

    Hi Malihu,

    I’m try to use your nice scrollbar plugin in horizontal mode but i have some problems with Firefox browser (15.0.1). Other browsers go works fine.

    – The dragger bar events don`t work properly and makes scroll with the cursor out of it.
    – I have problem with the last element that don´t display inline but I resolve it adding a new div at last.
    You can see the test pagen on:

    http://xenonline.eu/seleccion_productos9.asp?sex=mujer&idm=ing&id_linea=4&id_familia=12

    Any suggestion how I can solve this problem?

    Thank you! Great work !

    Reply
    • Natxo
      Posted on October 4, 2012 at 17:19 Permalink

      Can anyone help me? I can not fix that the onmouseout event works properly in firefox.

      Reply
  4. Lionel
    Posted on September 28, 2012 at 12:19 Permalink

    Hi,
    Im using the mCustomScrollbar, awesome!
    I’ve a little problem with content. It seems that in FF it crop the last part of the div content.

    Any suggestions?
    Thanks,

    Lionel

    Reply
  5. noi
    Posted on September 28, 2012 at 05:59 Permalink

    Thanks for the tutorial, its working great in drupal 7.

    Anyway how can change the height of the .mCSB_dragger_bar?

    Thanks anyways!!
    c:

    Reply
  6. Carlos López
    Posted on September 27, 2012 at 22:39 Permalink

    I’m testing you scrollbars as i found it to feel my needs on putting customs on several places

    I’m setting a grid of fieldsets which has list of links, so, i’m setting a fixed height, hence the overflow must be scroll able, and I’m using your plugin for this matter. Still, i’m getting this error

    $this.data(“onScroll-Callback”).call();

    Firefox went crazy reporting this error, Chrome reports it every now as well as IE. Any advice on how to solve this matter?

    Reply
    • Carlos López
      Posted on September 27, 2012 at 22:40 Permalink

      *fill my needs

      should had double read it

      Reply
    • Carlos López
      Posted on September 28, 2012 at 01:10 Permalink

      Well, i just kinda solved my previous problem, i just added a try-catch on the line that was giving me trouble and works just fine on IE and FF. But its worry some that’s giving a problem.

      Well, i’m having another problem here… on all browser. The thing is when I click the scroll button (either up or down) it wont scroll. Any idea?

      Reply
      • Carlos López
        Posted on September 28, 2012 at 02:16 Permalink

        Debugging the script when loading the buttons, i found that every time that they are trying to check the data on scrollButtons-enable it comes undefined. Later i check every key that data has and found out that scrollButtons-enable
        scrollButtons-scrollAmount
        scrollButtons-scrollSpeed
        scrollButtons-scrollType
        onTotalScroll-Offset
        where the only ones that came as undefined. The rest gave me their values correctly.

        Reply
      • Carlos López
        Posted on September 28, 2012 at 03:23 Permalink

        Don’t know if jquery 1.6.1 has problems reading keys with a – sign on the name, as i’m working on 1.6.1, we aren’t going to update till we get word it doesn’t mess up the project (much), and we are stable with 1.6.1

        In the meantime, i fixed the issue. If you want to take note. Instead of using the data option, i just created a global variable, and once the options have been loaded, i copy them to this global variable and read the options from there

        Reply
        • malihu
          Posted on September 28, 2012 at 11:29 Permalink

          Hi,

          I think your problem is due to this bug regarding only jQuery 1.6.1 (previous and later versions don’t have this issue).

          It seems that data method “camelizes” data key if “-” is used. E.g. scrollButtons-enable becomes scrollButtonsEnable. Weird!

          Reply
  7. Leonardo
    Posted on September 27, 2012 at 21:02 Permalink

    Hello, malihu.

    sorry my gesture, is what I’m using google translator.

    I wonder if it is possible to use two bars, bottom and right side because my application is not going both ways, just one.

    could you help me please?

    Thank you.

    Reply
  8. aswani kumar
    Posted on September 27, 2012 at 19:59 Permalink

    hi malihu,

    you have been very supportive to people with this scroll plugin. thank you.

    i have problem with the update method. i tried every way, even with default values but no luck.

    please tell me where did i do wrong.

    #left-nav #div-cat{
    height:420px;
    width:300px;
    overflow:auto;}

    $(“#div-cat, #div-stations”).mCustomScrollbar({
    set_width:false,
    set_height:false,
    horizontalScroll:false,
    scrollInertia:550,
    scrollEasing:”easeOutCirc”,
    mouseWheel:”auto”,
    autoDraggerLength:true,
    scrollButtons:{
    enable:true,
    scrollType:”continuous”,
    scrollSpeed:20,
    scrollAmount:40
    }

    });

    $.post(‘json.php’, {‘param’:’GetLang’}, function(data) {

    var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(data);
    items = new Array();
    $.each(obj, function(key, val) {
    items.push(‘‘ + val + ‘‘);
    });

    $(‘#div-cat’).html(” + items.join(”) + ”);
    jQuery(“#div-cat”).mCustomScrollbar(“update”);
    });

    on document load its working fine but after updating content its getting normal scrollbars.

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 28, 2012 at 11:43 Permalink

      Hello,

      The plugin inserts its own markup in order to create the custom scrollbar (see this visual layout). Your actual content is inside the .mCSB_container div, so you should call the update method on this instead of #div-cat:

      jQuery("#div-cat .mCSB_container").mCustomScrollbar("update");

      Reply
  9. Leonardo
    Posted on September 27, 2012 at 19:32 Permalink

    I’m doing an application, how can I put scrollbar on the side and bottom? unfortunately it is necessary both because I am working with large tables.

    thank’s great plugin.

    Reply
  10. Stefan
    Posted on September 27, 2012 at 08:39 Permalink

    Hello!

    I have integrated your plugin on a joomla website. The scrollbar works fine, but other plugins which are using jquery and are loaded inside of the “designed scrollbar div” are knocked out. For example picture zoom or madalboxes just dont appear (they worked properly before).

    Any idea how to prevent this?

    Kind regards,
    Stefan

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 27, 2012 at 12:00 Permalink

      Hello,
      You probably need to apply the custom scrollbar first and then call the other plugins. The custom scrollbar plugin inserts its own markup, so if you’ve already called other plugin functions on the same content, they might not work since the markup has changed.

      Reply
      • Stefan
        Posted on September 27, 2012 at 15:03 Permalink

        Thank you for the hint!

        First I included the script-part at the end of the body-tag.

        Now i included it at the beginning of the head-tag. Everything works fine!

        Thanks for the great work and fast help!

        Reply
  11. Tomas
    Posted on September 26, 2012 at 19:00 Permalink

    The plugin is really great, but I’ve found one flaw.It’s impossible without modifying js code, to apply padding/margin to content and thereby to make scroller seem higher than content.

    Example

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 27, 2012 at 02:39 Permalink

      Yes. Only the opposite (content higher than scrollbar) is possible, as it seemed more likely or logical design-wise.

      Reply
  12. kc-viper
    Posted on September 25, 2012 at 18:04 Permalink

    Hi,

    Really nice plugins.
    But i’ve an issue with jquery 1.8.1, i’m getting error “Cannot call method ‘call’ of undefined” when dragging on the drag bar.

    One more issue is the scroll buttons up down remains on top and are not working when clicking.

    Thanks and Regards,

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 25, 2012 at 18:38 Permalink

      Hi,
      Try to use jQuery 1.8 with the latest version of jQuery UI (I’ve included jquery-ui-1.8.23.custom.min.js in the download archive).

      Reply
      • kc-viper
        Posted on September 25, 2012 at 18:57 Permalink

        many thanks for your quick response.

        However your suggestions was not successful.
        I’m getting same error.

        I don’t know if it’s because i’m using it inside nivo slider that’s why it’s not working as your samples?

        Anyway i should seek for alternatives or try to debug more deeply in your code when i’ve time to do so.

        Many thanks again dude for your plugins and support.

        Highly appreciated.

        Reply
  13. Tomas
    Posted on September 25, 2012 at 17:24 Permalink

    Thanks very much for the plugin! I don’t want to load whole jQuery UI, because it’s quite heavy(0.2MB).Could you tell which components must be present for plugin to work ?

    Reply
    • Tomas
      Posted on September 25, 2012 at 17:40 Permalink

      I applied some “trial and error” and made jQuery UI package from core, widget, mouse, and draggable.It doesn’t give any errors. Did I miss some packages which could get some not that visible errors ?

      If not that’s >75% smaller file with custom jQuery UI and only these four packages.

      Reply
      • malihu
        Posted on September 25, 2012 at 18:41 Permalink

        You haven’t missed any packages.
        The archive already contains jquery-ui-1.8.23.custom.min.js (it’s inside the jquery directory).

        Reply
  14. Methylene
    Posted on September 25, 2012 at 13:51 Permalink

    Hi,

    I’m using your nice scrollbar plugin but i have a problem.

    I’ve choosen to use it with a custom picture (I have change the dragger and dragger_bar background with a 15×57 picture). My picture appears but i’m unable to scroll “to the end”, there is a blank space between my picture and the end of the dragger rail.

    I’m not really good in english but you can show the problem here :

    http://www.adrien-godel.com/tests/mahi/bio.php

    What can i do ?

    Thanks a lot for your work.

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 25, 2012 at 15:01 Permalink

      Hi,

      You have this in your CSS:
      .mCSB_horizontal .mCSB_scrollTools .mCSB_dragger{ height:100%; }

      It should probably be the height of your .mCSB_dragger_bar (57 pixels). Check the following image to get an exact blueprint of the custom scrollbar markup:
      http://manos.malihu.gr/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/scrollbar_layout.png

      Reply
      • Methylene
        Posted on September 25, 2012 at 16:35 Permalink

        Hi again Malihu, and thanks for your answer…

        I don’t really understand, my scrollbar is vertical, I think the values are correctly set :

        .mCSB_scrollTools .mCSB_dragger .mCSB_dragger_bar{ width:15px; height:57px; margin:0; text-align:center; }

        But it still does not work ?

        Reply
  15. Srinivas
    Posted on September 25, 2012 at 13:50 Permalink

    Thank you, great plugn, well explained with exaples, very easy to impliment.

    Reply
  16. Vladimir Minkin
    Posted on September 24, 2012 at 18:08 Permalink

    I have trouble with work of that nice plugin after fade transition animation on them. I use a TweenLite for animate a div witch content a text, and hide them from the screen (shift them to the bottom and off the screen) .
    TweenLite.to(currentView, 1, {css:{opacity:0, top:window.innerHeight}, onComplete:function(){
    currentView.hide(currentView.find(“.data”))
    $(currentView).css(“display”,’none’);

    currentView content a text wrapped by another 3 divs

    Can you help me to solve that problem?

    Reply
  17. Cedric
    Posted on September 24, 2012 at 12:05 Permalink

    I’m trying to use it in a nested div where the inner one is bigger than the outer one, but the scrollbar remains deactivated, even when defining fixed sizes for both. When looking at the code, the .mCSB_container-div also has the css class .mCS_no_scrollbar, which looks like it’s intended for elements of a size that don’t require any scrolling.
    Any idea what’s the problem here?

    Reply
    • Alan
      Posted on October 10, 2012 at 18:47 Permalink

      I am also interested in knowing the answer to the above question…
      Is there any way to deactivate the use of the “mCS_no_scrollbar” class??

      Reply
  18. Greg
    Posted on September 23, 2012 at 00:05 Permalink

    I have an issue that doesn’t seem to be addressed here. It does not work when the page is in an iframe. In Chrome it sort of works but doesn’t have the animation, in IE it doesn’t scroll at all.

    Reply
  19. Nevin
    Posted on September 21, 2012 at 21:49 Permalink

    Hi Malihu,

    Is there a way to force the scrollbar even when the content doesn’t exceed past the browser window?

    Thanks!

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 22, 2012 at 09:46 Permalink

      No. The scrollbar attaches only when it’s functional (content needs scrolling). Maybe you could give your content a bottom margin or padding to accomplish what you want.

      Reply
  20. Lai
    Posted on September 21, 2012 at 19:28 Permalink

    Hi Malihu,

    I have tried to apply this scroll bar to my work. It seems there, but it is not appearing at first load. The vertical scrollbar only appear after I try to zoom in or zoom out. May I know what is the possible problem and possible solution?

    Thanks

    Reply
  21. Andrew
    Posted on September 21, 2012 at 19:14 Permalink

    Hi,
    First of all thanks for a fantastic plugin!

    I’m using your script on my latest project but have run into a problem and was hoping you could help.

    I’m using a form inside the scroller. When I first click the form’s submit button, the page scrolls to the top. When I try a second time the form submits. The form can be seen at http://www.whitedoorevents.co.uk/contact-us

    How can I stop this behavior?

    Thanks for any help!!

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 21, 2012 at 19:49 Permalink

      Hi Andrew,
      I think the auto-scrolling happens due to some of your elements positioning. The easiest way to fix this, is probably by removing position:relative from .form fieldset.

      Reply
      • Andrew
        Posted on September 21, 2012 at 19:57 Permalink

        Thanks Malihu, that’s worked!

        Reply
  22. Athanasia
    Posted on September 21, 2012 at 16:45 Permalink

    Hello there,

    Thank you for sharing and keep on improving and supporting such a useful plugin!
    I am struggling a day now with a strange bug(?) on firefox. Everything works great in any other browsers except firefox.
    I noticed that the js is not executed after class mCustomScrollbar _mCS_1 is added on the div that scrolling is needed. Have you ever faced a problem like that?

    Thanks in advance!

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 21, 2012 at 17:54 Permalink

      Not really…
      Check your page with Firebug addon and see if get any console errors.

      Reply
      • Athanasia
        Posted on September 24, 2012 at 14:28 Permalink

        Thanks for replying!
        Yes, I have some errors on my console but I can’t find out have they might be related to this.
        The errors are these:

        – Unknown property ‘box-sizing’. Declaration dropped. @ ………/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css:21
        – Unknown property ‘-moz-border-radius’. Declaration dropped. @ ………../jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css:31
        – Error in parsing value for ‘filter’. Declaration dropped. @ …………/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css:61
        – Selector expected. Ruleset ignored due to bad selector. @ …………/jquery.mCustomScrollbar.css:69

        At first I thought that maybe it’s this ff bug with box-sizing and min-width but I don’t have anymore min-widths…

        Reply
        • Athanasia
          Posted on September 26, 2012 at 16:24 Permalink

          I just found out ,that some of my custom js was conflicting with plugin’s code..
          Now it works great. Thanks again!

          Reply
  23. Carlo
    Posted on September 21, 2012 at 11:28 Permalink

    Hi,
    any way to make the scrollbar appear on the right border of the div I applied it on?

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 21, 2012 at 13:47 Permalink

      Hi,
      Not really sure what you mean, but the plugin cannot place the custom scrollbar outside of the element you’ve applied to (it cannot possibly know the rest of your page markup). You can wrap your content within another div or use .mCSB_container (which contains your content) to apply the styling you want.

      Reply
      • Carlo
        Posted on September 21, 2012 at 15:00 Permalink

        Thanks for your answer 🙂

        I’ll try to explain better: I am applying the custom scrollbar to a .content div. This div has just a border around. I’d like to put the draggable element of the scroll bar on the right border.

        Reply
        • malihu
          Posted on September 21, 2012 at 16:05 Permalink

          If you want to place the scrollbar exactly on top of the right border, you probably need to apply the border on the .mCSB_container (instead of .content) and set .mCSB_scrollTools left position accordingly.

          Reply
  24. Ilyon
    Posted on September 20, 2012 at 23:25 Permalink

    Hello, malihu!

    You’ve got a great plugin! Everything works ok, but I’m trying now to find solution for “scrollTo” option in your plugin. I use WP and want to scroll page to anchor when the user click on “Comments” links; so, I need to move to the bottom of the page with this code: $('.comments_anchor').mCustomScrollbar("scrollTo","#comments");, but I get Firebug error: mCSB_dragger.position() is null.

    Any help will be appreciated!

    Reply
    • Ilyon
      Posted on September 22, 2012 at 14:11 Permalink

      I’m still waiting for your feedback!

      Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 22, 2012 at 14:48 Permalink

      Hi,

      Have you applied the plugin on .comments_anchor?
      $('.comments_anchor').mCustomScrollbar();

      Reply
  25. Nevin
    Posted on September 19, 2012 at 21:33 Permalink

    The scroll amount doesn’t work…even in your demo, http://manos.malihu.gr/tuts/custom-scrollbar-plugin/scroll_buttons_and_snap_scrolling_examples.html. It only moves the default 40px.

    this is what i’m trying to do…
    scrollButtons: {
    enable: true,
    scrollType:”pixels”,
    scrollSpeed:400
    }

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 20, 2012 at 06:06 Permalink

      On that demo, the scroll buttons move the content by 116 pixels (not 40). You need to set the scrollAmount option parameter to the amount of pixels you want:
      scrollButtons:{ enable:true, scrollType:"pixels", scrollAmount:400 }

      On the code you posted you’ve set scrollSpeed which is the speed of continuous scrolling (not the amount of pixels to scroll).

      Reply
      • Nevin
        Posted on September 20, 2012 at 21:04 Permalink

        Thanks for you’re response! I realized I was measuring the amount the dragger_bar moved not the content. The content does move the set amount. I see I typed the wrong parameter in the comment.

        Thanks again!

        Reply
  26. Cyber
    Posted on September 19, 2012 at 19:22 Permalink

    Hi there,

    For some reason, I don’t get the smooth scrolling on Chrome. Any ideas? It works fine on other browsers… thanks a lot!

    PS: THANK YOU for this plugin!

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 20, 2012 at 06:13 Permalink

      Hello,
      Do you mean the animation performance in Chrome is not so good compared to the other browsers? If yes, then it’s probably some styling element (e.g. box-shadows) that makes Chrome engine struggle.

      Reply
  27. Matt
    Posted on September 19, 2012 at 13:52 Permalink

    Heya,

    I have implemented your plugin on my own site – works really great 🙂

    Just one thing, Im trying to get it to scroll back up to the top but I cannot get that functionality to work.

    I am calling the following code;

    jQuery(“#mcs_container”).mCustomScrollbar(“scrollTo”,”top”);

    but nothing is happening. Any ideas why? 🙂 thankyou!!

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 20, 2012 at 06:19 Permalink

      Hi,

      Judging by your selector id, I assume you’re using the old version of the plugin (version 1.x). The scrollTo method (and the entire guide in the first page of the post) is for the 2.x plugin version only.

      Reply
      • Matt
        Posted on October 22, 2012 at 17:58 Permalink

        Hello Sir,

        Yes V2 worked a treat thankyou 🙂

        Reply
  28. dejan
    Posted on September 18, 2012 at 12:58 Permalink

    I can’t make it work on IE 7. Even if I try with your example it dosn’t work. I try in IE tester, end IE 9 when I turn of compatibility view.

    And besides, your work is amazing and you helped a lot, not only me, but everyone here.

    Tnx again, and sorry for my English 🙂

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 18, 2012 at 13:05 Permalink

      Hello,

      What exactly doesn’t work? I’ve checked the script with ie7 (on win xp virtual machine) and the scrollbar itself seem to work, except for some CSS rules.

      Reply
      • dejan
        Posted on September 19, 2012 at 12:07 Permalink

        First I want to thank you for fast answer, I rarely write some comments, but I never got answer faster.

        Okay, I think that all the problems associated with CSS.
        First thing is collapsing some divs MCSB_scrollTools,_dragger,_draggerRail.
        Second problem is when I put some table in horizontal div. Then I can drag scrooler to the end of 10000px even if give table width:auto.
        I hope that I’m gonna find some solution, and tnx to you again.

        Reply
        • dejan
          Posted on September 21, 2012 at 14:04 Permalink

          Hi,

          I just want to tell that I solved the problem with css class in IE7 and it works great. Greetings from Belgrade

          Reply
  29. JayB
    Posted on September 14, 2012 at 04:53 Permalink

    The customer scrollbar plugin is not only great but well presented. Wonderful job.

    One question: I have one scrollbar installed on a single page. When I bring up the page on the web, I initially see the browser’s default scrollbar which switches over to the custom scrollbar evidently after the page has been loaded. Is there any way to prevent this from happening perhaps through a line of code that would disable the browser’s default scrollbar?

    Thanks in advance.

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 14, 2012 at 21:08 Permalink

      Hello and thanks for your comments 🙂

      There are two ways to avoid the native scrollbar appear while page is loading:

      a) If you don’t use any images (or other elements with external source) inside your scrolling content, you may call mCustomScrollbar function on document ready (instead of window load). This will apply the custom scrollbar much faster, by the time DOM is ready. I’ve included code examples for both ways in the “How to use it” guide.

      b) Alternatively, you can set your element to overflow:hidden (instead of overflow:auto). This will skip browser’s native scrollbar all together. The only issue with this, is that users with javascript disabled will not be able to scroll your content. If you still need to support disabled js clients, you should add an additional style inside a noscript tag that sets your element to overflow:auto. For example:
      <noscript> <style>.content{overflow:auto;}</style> </noscript>

      Hope this helps

      Reply
      • JayB
        Posted on September 16, 2012 at 03:01 Permalink

        It works perfectly. Thanks for your help. And keep up the wonderful work!

        Reply
  30. Carolina Ramírez
    Posted on September 14, 2012 at 04:24 Permalink

    Hello, I’m a graphic designer and I would use this application for a web design business. What are the conditions for use on a commercial website?

    Reply
    • malihu
      Posted on September 14, 2012 at 05:05 Permalink

      Hi, see the license at the end of the post (Creative commons 3.0).

      Reply

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