A tiny library designed to handle swipe gestures on touchscreens.
Warning: If you look for a polished, production-grade and feature-rich library for handling touch events, please continue your search. This library is in an early state, built mostly for educational purposes and not tested thoroughly.
npm install miniswipe --save
Miniswipe
will be added to window as a global.
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/miniswipe"></script>
const swipeHandler = new Miniswipe(document.body, { debug: false, allowClick: true })
{string | HTMLElement} The element on which the handler listens for touch gestures
{Object} Options
{Options.allowClick} If true: miniswipe will handle not only touch events but mouse gestures as well
{Options.allowMouseLeave} If true: allow swipes to end with a mouseleave event rather than just mouseup
{Options.debug} If true: miniswipe will log every registered swipe and the subsequently executed functions
Β
Note: All methods on the Miniswipe class are chainable (return
this
)
Note: You can call these methods multiple times without issue, e.g. if you call
.left()
twice on the same swipe handler, both passed functions will be run when a leftwards swipe is detected.
swipeHandler
.left(() => console.log('User swiped left!'))
.right(() => console.log('User swiped right!'))
.up(() => console.log('User swiped up!'))
.down(() => console.log('User swiped down!'))
The functions you pass to left
, right
, up
or down
have the swipe handler's target element bound as their this
context (unless lexically scoped) and receive the event that completed the swipe ('touchmove', 'mouseup' or 'mouseleave' if { allowMouseLeave: true }
in options) as their first argument. Example:
swipeHandler.up(function(event) {
console.log(this === event.currentTarget) // > true
})
Β
Note: Miniswipe will throw an error if you
start()
a handler that is already active and vice versa
swipeHandler.start()
swipeHandler.stop()
if (swipeHandler.active) swipeHandler.stop()