Scroll chaining
Scroll chaining refers to the behavior observed when a user scrolls past the Scroll boundary of a scrollable element, causing scrolling on an ancestor element.
When a user scrolls within a scrollable element such as a <div>
or <textarea>
and the scrollport boundary (top, bottom, left or right) of the scrollable element is reached, there may be a "chained effect" in which the scroll action is seamlessly propagated to the parent element. This behavior creates a continuous scrolling experience, both vertically and horizontally.
A scroll chain is the order of scrollable elements where the scrolling action passes from one element to another. This happens when an inner element is scrolled to its limit, and the scrolling continues to its parent element, creating a 'chain' of scrolling actions. Chaining typically recurses up the containing block.
See also
overscroll-behavior
CSS property- CSS overflow module
- CSS overscroll behavior module
- CSS scroll snap module