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Home/ Questions/Q 8840045
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T10:22:32+00:00 2026-06-14T10:22:32+00:00

I’m trying to update the location.hash by checking what div is currently active in

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I’m trying to update the location.hash by checking what div is currently active in a long scrolling site. This works fine is chrome, but is failing in Firefox and IE. I have tested with console.log and
I am able to see the id in console, but as soon as I try to feed this into the location hash the scrolling ceases to work on the page, or jumps around unpredictably!

$(window).scroll(function () {
$('div').each(function(){
    if (
      $(this).attr('class')=='article' && $(this).offset().top < window.pageYOffset + 10 
    && $(this).offset().top + $(this).height() > window.pageYOffset + 10
    ) {
       window.location.hash = $(this).attr('id')
    }
});

});
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T10:22:34+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 10:22 am

    First you need to understand that the scroll event fires many times a second. Combine that with the methodology you are using to search the DOM… look for every div, then filter all those div‘s for the ones you want and do this all many times a second…you are overloading the browser needlessly.

    Scroll the window in this simple demo and see how often your script is firing; http://jsfiddle.net/tRx2P/

    If you are going to search the DOM for the same elements repeatedly, caching them into variables will give a big performance boost. Searching the DOM is a lot more expensive than searching a cached variable containing elements

    /* use jQuery selector that already filters out all the other `div` in page*/
    var $articles= $('.article');
    /* now use the variable inside your functions*/
    $( window).scroll(function(){
        $articles.each(.....
        /* use the same cache principles for "$(this)" to help avoid needless function calls*/
    })
    

    Now the really important part is you should throttle back the number of times a second these need to be checked. There is no benefit in updating the hash multiple times while the user is still scrolling…and overloading the browser to do it

    This modification of the demo only fires the code when user hasn’t scrolled for 300ms which could likely be increased to 1/2 second or even more. It does this by constantly setting a timeout delay
    http://jsfiddle.net/tRx2P/2/

    You should be able to now adapt these concepts to the code you have

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