Touch friendly. Incredibly small. Carousels the native way.
Carousel Lite aims to provide the most simple carousel solution possible. With a very small amount of code, we can hijack the default scroll behavior of an overflowed list (which provides us the added benefit of touch support with no additional JS - see below).
carousel.register( args );
Must provide the following arguments:
Selector for carousel ul
Selector for li children of the carousel ul
Selector for next button
Selector for previous button
Nothing more is needed than a simple list:
<ul>
<li></li>
<li></li>
<li></li>
</ul>
ul {
overflow: hidden;
white-space: nowrap;
}
li {
display: inline-block;
}
The elements that you choose for your next/previous buttons can be anything, but here is an example:
<button class="previous"></button>
<button class="next"></button>
When the previous or next button is disabled (the carousel is at the beginning or end of a list, respectively), carousel-button-disabled
is added to its class list (the disabled
attribute is also toggled, but is only relevant if you are using button
elements for next/previous). You can use this to style the buttons appropriately.
When a carousel is registered, the previous button is automatically disabled. The next button is disabled as well if the entirety of list fits within the carousel's clientWidth.
To fall back on native touch scroll interaction for mobile devices, add in a media query like this:
@media (max-width: 640px) {
button {
display: none;
}
ul {
overflow: auto;
}
}