Sometimes, your app may be required to display a long list of similar records. But browsers aren't typically prepared to render hundreds or thousands of DOM elements at the same time. That's where Emberella Treadmill comes in.
Provided an array of content, Emberella Treadmill renders the minimum number of child listings to fill the visible portion of a scrolling area. As customers scroll, these child listings are "recycled" (repositioned and redrawn with new content) appropriately to create the illusion of a long, continuously scrolling list.
For example, I have about 1,000 contacts in my address book. As I scroll, the listing element with "Aaron" moves out of view above the scrolling area. That element takes a new position below the scrolling area and updates to read "Alex".
- Ember.js v4.4 or above
- Ember CLI v4.4 or above
- Node.js v16 or above
Passes all tests in the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, and Safari (macOS and iOS).
It uses "flexbox" and CSS transforms. Any browser that doesn't support those features will likely not work correctly.
As an Ember Addon, it's easy to get started with Emberella Treadmill.
From the root directory of your Ember project
$ ember install ember-ella-treadmill
From the root directory of your Ember project
$ npm install ember-ella-treadmill --save-dev
At a minimum, Emberella Treadmill requires an array of content and something to
display for each item in the array. Assuming model
is defined in the
controller as an array of 8,712 people profiles, the following would display a
listing of 8,712 names and email addresses 435,600 pixels tall (the default
listing height is 50px
).
{{#ella-treadmill content=model as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
<p>{{item.email}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
If content is set to an empty array, you may use an {{else}}
block to display
custom messaging.
{{#ella-treadmill content=empty as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
<p>{{item.email}}</p>
{{else}}
<div class="empty">Bummer. No search results for "Captain Gibberish"</div>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Displaying a list of 50px
tall items is good. Applying custom row heights or
rendering listings in a grid format is even better. Emberella Treadmill offers a
few options for adjusting the size and position of listings.
Each item rendered by Emberella Treadmill will have a class name indicating
which row it belongs to. Typically, items will alternate between the class name
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
and ella-treadmill-item-row-2
. You can style these
classes to add horizontal "zebra striping" to your listings.
To adjust the frequency of class name reuse, set the fluctuate
property to a
number other than 2
.
For example, the default value, fluctuate: 2
would add class names to items as
follows:
- Row 1:
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
- Row 2:
ella-treadmill-item-row-2
- Row 3:
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
- Row 4:
ella-treadmill-item-row-2
- Row 5:
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
- Row 6:
ella-treadmill-item-row-2
- and so on...
Setting fluctuate
to 4
would add class names to items as follows:
- Row 1:
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
- Row 2:
ella-treadmill-item-row-2
- Row 3:
ella-treadmill-item-row-3
- Row 4:
ella-treadmill-item-row-4
- Row 5:
ella-treadmill-item-row-1
- Row 6:
ella-treadmill-item-row-2
- and so on...
Every fourth row (1st, 5th, 9th, 13th, etc) will contain items with the class
name ella-treadmill-item-row-1
in the following code example.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model fluctuate=4 as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Each item rendered by Emberella Treadmill will have a class name indicating
which column it belongs to. Typically, items will alternate between the class
name ella-treadmill-item-column-1
and ella-treadmill-item-column-2
. You can
style these classes to add vertical "zebra striping" to your listings.
To adjust the frequency of class name reuse, set the fluctuateColumn
property
to a number other than 2
.
For example, the default value, fluctuateColumn: 2
would add class names to
items as follows:
- Column 1:
ella-treadmill-item-column-1
- Column 2:
ella-treadmill-item-column-2
- Column 3:
ella-treadmill-item-column-1
- Column 4:
ella-treadmill-item-column-2
- Column 5:
ella-treadmill-item-column-1
- Column 6:
ella-treadmill-item-column-2
- and so on...
Setting fluctuateColumn
to 3
would add class names to items as follows:
- Column 1:
ella-treadmill-item-column-1
- Column 2:
ella-treadmill-item-column-2
- Column 3:
ella-treadmill-item-column-3
- Column 4:
ella-treadmill-item-column-1
- Column 5:
ella-treadmill-item-column-2
- Column 6:
ella-treadmill-item-column-3
- and so on...
Every third column (1st, 4th, 7th, 10th, etc) will contain items with the
class name ella-treadmill-item-column-1
in the following code example.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model fluctuateColumn=3 as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
If minColumnWidth
is less than 50% of the Emberella Treadmill component
element's width, flexible columns will rendered to fill the available horizontal
space.
For example, if the component's rendered element is 600px wide and
minColumnWidth: 180px
, ella-treadmill
would place items into a grid with 3
columns of 200px
width. Resizing the viewport to allow the component's element
to be 720px
wide would rearrange the grid into four columns, each 180px
wide.
The default behavior is to show a long list of items in a single column.
(minColumnWidth: '100%'
)
Currently, minimum column widths can be set in px
or %
.
The following example uses a percentage for minColumnWidth
to ensure 3 columns
are rendered even if the viewport is resized.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model minColumnWidth='33%' as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Alternatively, setting minColumnWidth
to a size in pixels ensures a dynamic
number of equally sized columns will be rendered to fill the available width of
the listing. Each listing will be no less than the specified number of pixels
wide.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model minColumnWidth='180px' as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
The Emberella Treadmill will scroll to the item with the numeric index provided
to the moveTo
property. For example, the following would scroll to the 300th
item in the list.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model moveTo=300 as |item| }}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Emberella Treadmill will typically render only enough rows to fill the currently visible portion of the scrolling parent plus one additional row. Sometimes, especially if data is fetched or computed asynchronously, perceived performance can be improved by drawing a few additional rows above and below the visible portion of the list. That way, data for these listings have an opportunity to be fetched slightly before they scroll into view.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model overdraw=20 as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
In the above example, 20% more rows will be rendered above and below the visible
part of the listing. Therefore, if twenty items is enough to fill the viewport,
this overdraw
value of 20
would render 8 additional items (four above the
viewable area and four below the viewable area). That's 20% more items in each
scrolling direction.
Specify the height of each listing.
The following example makes each listing 102px
tall.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model row=102 as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
The next example makes each listing 300px
tall.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model row='300px' as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
You may specify a percentage height. In this next code snippet, exactly 5 rows will be visible on screen.
{{#ella-treadmill content=model row='20%' as |item|}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
You can also specify row height in em
, rem
, vh
, or (in theory) any other
CSS unit of measure.
Emberella Treadmill will send the following actions. All actions deliver the current state of the component instance in the form of a plain Javascript object.
actions: {
handleSomeActionFromTreadmill(properties) {
// Do something with the Treadmill's state
// `properties` is a plain Javascript object in the following format:
// {
// 'scrollTop': 1078, // The parent scroll position
// 'topDelta': 673, // parent top - component top
// 'startingIndex': 14, // which index is visually first (closest to top left)
// 'numberOfVisibleItems': 12, // The number of rendered listings
// 'visibleIndexes': [14, 15, 16, ... 23, 24, 25] // Array of currently visible indexes
// }
}
}
Triggered for the first in a series of scroll
events.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-scroll-start=(action'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Triggered repeatedly as the scroll position changes.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-scroll=(action 'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Triggered whenever scrolling events have ceased for more than 50ms.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-scroll-end=(action'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Triggered for the first in a series of resize
events.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-resize-start=(action 'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Triggered repeatedly as the component's element resizes.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-resize=(action 'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Triggered whenever resizing events have ceased for more than 50ms.
{{#ella-treadmill
content=model
on-resize-end=(action 'handleSomeActionFromTreadmill') as |item|
}}
<p>{{item.name}}</p>
{{/ella-treadmill}}
Pagination and "infinite scroll" can be painfully difficult to use.
Showing a large data set on pages of 25 items at a time is less than ideal. If I have 547 pages of customer profiles to scan through, how do I jump to page 314? What page is "Linda" on? What if I send someone a URL for page 3 and the record I wanted her to see drifts to page 4?
While "infinite scroll" may work reasonably well for a social feed that aggregates data produced by a multitude of other people, it isn't as suitable for scanning through records of my own creation or members of a finite list.
That's where Emberella Treadmill comes in. It allows customers to skim through a large list using the browser's native scrolling functionality. It doesn't require learning a custom pagination UI or being forced to load batches of data in sequential order.
It simply behaves like a scrolling list. Period.
If you use Ember CLI (and I hope you do), here are the standard instructions for installing and modifying this addon for yourself or to pitch in with enhancements or bugfixes.
git clone http://github.com/realityendshere/ella-treadmill.git
this repositorycd ella-treadmill
npm install
(oryarn install
)
ember serve
- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
yarn test
(Runsember try:each
to test your addon against multiple Ember versions)ember test
ember test --server
ember build
For more information on using ember-cli, visit https://ember-cli.com/.