Yes it is scroll bar but we can implement in blogs where it will progress for the blog height and NOT the body height and hence can improve reading experience.
I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
Scroll progress bars or whatever they are called are something different than usual scrollbars. They are meant to please user and make your page look good. Unless it doesn't distract user or harms UX it's well and good.
And yea.. It's a scrollbar but just kept horizontal and sticky to the top
I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
Accessibility First DevRel. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
Infinite scroll breaks browser scrollbar functionality, and trying to implement your own begs the question, why choose infinite scroll in the first place?
Accessibility First DevRel. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
Hence why I said I don't agree with it, not a fan of infinite scroll myself due to accessibility issues it causes, but we are currently conversing on a site that uses infinite scroll for the home page feed so I suppose beggars can't be choosers 😋
I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
The home page here breaks browser functionality, but it's not really a problem because we're not reading a single article. The proposed solution in this post doesn't apply as far as I can tell unless you want a little indicator of your position in every blog post - and in turn that requires every blog post to be rendered in full rather than as a teaser card, otherwise they'd all say you were 100% of the way through.
Accessibility First DevRel. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
I think I am not being clear, that part was me joking about the prevalence of infinite scroll, I was not meaning to link it to the article or having infinite scroll on actual posts.
I am also agreeing with you that there is no need for this on most sites and all i offered was one scenario (one which I am not a fan of!) where this could be useful as scroll position couldn’t be correlated with article length.
Hope we are clear now as we arguing a point from the same side of the fence!
I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
🤦♂️😂
Yes it is
scroll bar
but we can implement in blogs where it will progress for the blog height and NOT the body height and hence can improve reading experience.Unless you have an unusually large footer, why would the two be any different? Blog posts are traditionally one per page.
Scroll progress bars
or whatever they are called are something different than usual scrollbars. They are meant to please user and make your page look good. Unless it doesn't distract user or harms UX it's well and good.And yea..
It's a scrollbar but just kept horizontal and sticky to the top
That sounds like a web browser but with extra steps :)
A use case is for blogs where they have infinite scroll leading to the next post.
Not that I agree with infinite scroll but that is a valid use case as you can have a progress bar for each.
Other than that I do agree that there is little benefit (although aesthetically I do quite like the circular progress meter)
Infinite scroll breaks browser scrollbar functionality, and trying to implement your own begs the question, why choose infinite scroll in the first place?
Hence why I said I don't agree with it, not a fan of infinite scroll myself due to accessibility issues it causes, but we are currently conversing on a site that uses infinite scroll for the home page feed so I suppose beggars can't be choosers 😋
The home page here breaks browser functionality, but it's not really a problem because we're not reading a single article. The proposed solution in this post doesn't apply as far as I can tell unless you want a little indicator of your position in every blog post - and in turn that requires every blog post to be rendered in full rather than as a teaser card, otherwise they'd all say you were 100% of the way through.
I think I am not being clear, that part was me joking about the prevalence of infinite scroll, I was not meaning to link it to the article or having infinite scroll on actual posts.
I am also agreeing with you that there is no need for this on most sites and all i offered was one scenario (one which I am not a fan of!) where this could be useful as scroll position couldn’t be correlated with article length.
Hope we are clear now as we arguing a point from the same side of the fence!
Gotcha :)