mediawiki-skins-Vector/resources/skins.vector.js/sectionObserver.js

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/** @module SectionObserver */
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* @callback OnIntersection
* @param {HTMLElement} element The section that triggered the new intersection change.
*/
/**
* @typedef {Object} SectionObserverProps
* @property {NodeList} elements A list of HTML elements to observe for
* intersection changes. This list can be updated through the `elements` setter.
* @property {OnIntersection} onIntersection Called when a new intersection is observed.
* @property {number} [topMargin] The number of pixels to shrink the top of
* the viewport's bounding box before calculating intersections. This is useful
* for sticky elements (e.g. sticky headers). Defaults to 0 pixels.
* @property {number} [throttleMs] The number of milliseconds that the scroll
* handler should be throttled.
*/
/**
* @callback initSectionObserver
* @param {SectionObserverProps} props
* @return {SectionObserver}
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* Observe intersection changes with the viewport for one or more elements. This
* is intended to be used with the headings in the content so that the
* corresponding section(s) in the table of contents can be "activated" (e.g.
* bolded).
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
*
* When sectionObserver notices a new intersection change, the
* `props.onIntersection` callback will be fired with the corresponding section
* as a param.
*
* Because sectionObserver uses a scroll event listener (in combination with
* IntersectionObserver), the changes are throttled to a default maximum rate of
* 200ms so that the main thread is not excessively blocked.
* IntersectionObserver is used to asynchronously calculate the positions of the
* observed tags off the main thread and in a manner that does not cause
* expensive forced synchronous layouts.
*
* @param {SectionObserverProps} props
* @return {SectionObserver}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
*/
module.exports = function sectionObserver( props ) {
props = Object.assign( {
topMargin: 0,
throttleMs: 200,
onIntersection: () => {}
}, props );
let /** @type {number | undefined} */ timeoutId;
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
let /** @type {HTMLElement | undefined} */ current;
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
const observer = new IntersectionObserver( ( entries ) => {
let /** @type {IntersectionObserverEntry | undefined} */ closestNegativeEntry;
let /** @type {IntersectionObserverEntry | undefined} */ closestPositiveEntry;
const topMargin = /** @type {number} */ ( props.topMargin );
entries.forEach( ( entry ) => {
const top =
entry.boundingClientRect.top - topMargin;
if (
top > 0 &&
(
closestPositiveEntry === undefined ||
top < closestPositiveEntry.boundingClientRect.top - topMargin
)
) {
closestPositiveEntry = entry;
}
if (
top <= 0 &&
(
closestNegativeEntry === undefined ||
top > closestNegativeEntry.boundingClientRect.top - topMargin
)
) {
closestNegativeEntry = entry;
}
} );
const closestTag =
/** @type {HTMLElement} */ ( closestNegativeEntry ? closestNegativeEntry.target :
/** @type {IntersectionObserverEntry} */ ( closestPositiveEntry ).target
);
// If the intersection is new, fire the `onIntersection` callback.
if ( current !== closestTag ) {
props.onIntersection( closestTag );
}
current = closestTag;
// When finished finding the intersecting element, stop observing all
// observed elements. The scroll event handler will be responsible for
// throttling and reobserving the elements again. Because we don't have a
// wrapper element around our content headings and their children, we can't
// rely on IntersectionObserver (which is optimized to detect intersecting
// elements *within* the viewport) to reliably fire this callback without
// this manual step. Instead, we offload the work of calculating the
// position of each element in an efficient manner to IntersectionObserver,
// but do not use it to detect when a new element has entered the viewport.
observer.disconnect();
} );
/**
* Calculate the intersection of each observed element.
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
function calcIntersection() {
// IntersectionObserver will asynchronously calculate the boundingClientRect
// of each observed element off the main thread after `observe` is called.
props.elements.forEach( ( element ) => {
if ( !element.parentNode ) {
mw.log.warn( 'Element being observed is not in DOM', element );
return;
}
observer.observe( /** @type {HTMLElement} */ ( element ) );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
} );
}
function handleScroll() {
// Throttle the scroll event handler to fire at a rate limited by `props.throttleMs`.
if ( !timeoutId ) {
timeoutId = window.setTimeout( () => {
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
calcIntersection();
timeoutId = undefined;
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
}, props.throttleMs );
}
}
function bindScrollListener() {
window.addEventListener( 'scroll', handleScroll );
}
function unbindScrollListener() {
window.removeEventListener( 'scroll', handleScroll );
}
/**
* Pauses intersection observation until `resume` is called.
*/
function pause() {
unbindScrollListener();
clearTimeout( timeoutId );
timeoutId = undefined;
// Assume current is no longer valid while paused.
current = undefined;
}
/**
* Resumes intersection observation.
*/
function resume() {
bindScrollListener();
}
/**
* Cleans up event listeners and intersection observer. Should be called when
* the observer is permanently no longer needed.
*/
function unmount() {
unbindScrollListener();
observer.disconnect();
}
/**
* Set a list of HTML elements to observe for intersection changes.
*
* @param {NodeList} list
*/
function setElements( list ) {
props.elements = list;
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
bindScrollListener();
/**
* @typedef {Object} SectionObserver
* @property {calcIntersection} calcIntersection
* @property {pause} pause
* @property {resume} resume
* @property {unmount} unmount
* @property {setElements} setElements
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
return {
calcIntersection,
pause,
resume,
unmount,
setElements
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
};
};