How to handle window scroll event in Angular 4?

If you happen to be using Angular Material, you can do this:

import { ScrollDispatchModule } from '@angular/cdk/scrolling';

In Ts:

import { ScrollDispatcher } from '@angular/cdk/scrolling';

  constructor(private scrollDispatcher: ScrollDispatcher) {    
    this.scrollDispatcher.scrolled().subscribe(x => console.log('I am scrolling'));
  }

And in Template:

<div cdkScrollable>
  <div *ngFor="let one of manyToScrollThru">
    {{one}}
  </div>
</div>

Reference: https://material.angular.io/cdk/scrolling/overview


Probably your document isn't scrolling, but a div inside it is. The scroll event only bubbles up to the window if it's called from document. Also if you capture the event from document and call something like stopPropagation, you will not receive the event in window.

If you want to capture all the scroll events inside your application, which will also be from tiny scrollable containers, you have to use the default addEventListener method with useCapture set to true.

This will fire the event when it goes down the DOM, instead of the bubble stage. Unfortunately, and quite frankly a big miss, angular does not provide an option to pass in the event listener options, so you have to use the addEventListener:

export class WindowScrollDirective {

    ngOnInit() {
        window.addEventListener('scroll', this.scroll, true); //third parameter
    }

    ngOnDestroy() {
        window.removeEventListener('scroll', this.scroll, true);
    }

    scroll = (event): void => {
      //handle your scroll here
      //notice the 'odd' function assignment to a class field
      //this is used to be able to remove the event listener
    };

}

Now this is not all there is to it, because all major browsers (except IE and Edge, obviously) have implemented the new addEventListener spec, which makes it possible to pass an object as third parameter.

With this object you can mark an event listener as passive. This is a recommend thing to do on an event which fires a lot of time, which can interfere with UI performance, like the scroll event. To implement this, you should first check if the current browser supports this feature. On the mozilla.org they've posted a method passiveSupported, with which you can check for browser support. You can only use this though, when you are sure you are not going to use event.preventDefault()

Before I show you how to do that, there is another performance feature you could think of. To prevent change detection from running (the DoCheck gets called every time something async happens within the zone. Like an event firing), you should run your event listener outside the zone, and only enter it when it's really necessary. Soo, let's combine all these things:

export class WindowScrollDirective {

    private eventOptions: boolean|{capture?: boolean, passive?: boolean};

    constructor(private ngZone: NgZone) {}

    ngOnInit() {            
        if (passiveSupported()) { //use the implementation on mozilla
            this.eventOptions = {
                capture: true,
                passive: true
            };
        } else {
            this.eventOptions = true;
        }
        this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
            window.addEventListener('scroll', this.scroll, <any>this.eventOptions);
        });
    }

    ngOnDestroy() {
        window.removeEventListener('scroll', this.scroll, <any>this.eventOptions);
        //unfortunately the compiler doesn't know yet about this object, so cast to any
    }

    scroll = (): void => {
        if (somethingMajorHasHappenedTimeToTellAngular) {
           this.ngZone.run(() => {
               this.tellAngular();
           });
        }
    };   
}