IsInViewport
Track if an element is visible within the current viewport.
IsInViewport
uses the useIntersectionObserver
utility to track if an element is visible within the current viewport.
It accepts an element or getter that returns an element and an optional options
object that aligns
with the useIntersectionObserver
utility options.
Demo
Target node
Scroll down to observe the behavior
Target node is
viewportUsage
Basic Usage
<script lang="ts">
import { IsInViewport } from "runed";
let targetNode = $state<HTMLElement>()!;
const inViewport = new IsInViewport(() => targetNode);
</script>
<p bind:this={targetNode}>Target node</p>
<p>Target node in viewport: {inViewport.current}</p>
One-time Detection
The once
option automatically stops observing after the first intersection. This is useful for
one-time animations or loading content when it becomes visible:
<script lang="ts">
import { IsInViewport } from "runed";
let targetNode = $state<HTMLElement>()!;
const inViewport = new IsInViewport(() => targetNode, {
once: true
});
</script>
<div bind:this={targetNode} class="transition" class="transition-opacity {hasBeenSeen ? 'opacity-100' : 'opacity-0'}">
I'll fade in once when first visible, then stop observing
</div>
Observer Controls
The IsInViewport
class provides methods to control the underlying intersection observer. See useIntersectionObserver
for more information.
Type Definition
import { type UseIntersectionObserverOptions } from "runed";
export type IsInViewportOptions = UseIntersectionObserverOptions;
export declare class IsInViewport {
constructor(node: MaybeGetter<HTMLElement | null | undefined>, options?: IsInViewportOptions);
/** Current viewport intersection state */
get current(): boolean;
/** Stop observing permanently */
stop(): void;
/** Pause observation temporarily */
pause(): void;
/** Resume observation after pausing */
resume(): void;
/** Whether the observer is currently active */
get isActive(): boolean;
}