I am deprecating the 2.x version of Readmore.js. A new version is coming soon! Check it out and help me test it!
A smooth, responsive jQuery plugin for collapsing and expanding long blocks of text with "Read more" and "Close" links.
The markup Readmore.js requires is so simple, you can probably use it with your existing HTML—there's no need for complicated sets of div
's or hardcoded classes, just call .readmore()
on the element containing your block of text and Readmore.js takes care of the rest. Readmore.js plays well in a responsive environment, too.
Readmore.js is tested with—and supported on—all versions of jQuery greater than 1.9.1. All the "good" browsers are supported, as well as IE10+; IE8 & 9 should work, but are not supported and the experience will not be ideal.
Install Readmore.js with npm:
$ npm install readmore-js
Then include it in your HTML:
<script src="/node_modules/readmore-js/readmore.min.js"></script>
Or, using Webpack or Browserify:
require('readmore-js');
$('article').readmore();
It's that simple. You can change the speed of the animation, the height of the collapsed block, and the open and close elements.
$('article').readmore({
speed: 75,
lessLink: '<a href="#">Read less</a>'
});
speed: 100
in millisecondscollapsedHeight: 200
in pixelsheightMargin: 16
in pixels, avoids collapsing blocks that are only slightly larger thancollapsedHeight
moreLink: '<a href="#">Read more</a>'
lessLink: '<a href="#">Close</a>'
embedCSS: true
insert required CSS dynamically, set this tofalse
if you include the necessary CSS in a stylesheetblockCSS: 'display: block; width: 100%;'
sets the styling of the blocks, ignored ifembedCSS
isfalse
startOpen: false
do not immediately truncate, start in the fully opened positionbeforeToggle: function() {}
called after a more or less link is clicked, but before the block is collapsed or expandedafterToggle: function() {}
called after the block is collapsed or expandedblockProcessed: function() {}
called once per block during initilization after Readmore.js has processed the block.
If the element has a max-height
CSS property, Readmore.js will use that value rather than the value of the collapsedHeight
option.
The beforeToggle
and afterToggle
callbacks both receive the same arguments: trigger
, element
, and expanded
.
trigger
: the "Read more" or "Close" element that was clickedelement
: the block that is being collapsed or expandedexpanded
: Boolean;true
means the block is expanded
The blockProcessed
callback receives element
and collapsable
.
element
: the block that has just been processedcollapsable
: Boolean;false
means the block was shorter than the specified minimumcollapsedHeight
--the block will not have a "Read more" link
Here's an example of how you could use the afterToggle
callback to scroll back to the top of a block when the "Close" link is clicked.
$('article').readmore({
afterToggle: function(trigger, element, expanded) {
if(! expanded) { // The "Close" link was clicked
$('html, body').animate( { scrollTop: element.offset().top }, {duration: 100 } );
}
}
});
You can remove the Readmore.js functionality like so:
$('article').readmore('destroy');
Or, you can be more surgical by specifying a particular element:
$('article:first').readmore('destroy');
You can toggle a block from code:
$('article:nth-of-type(3)').readmore('toggle');
Readmore.js is designed to use CSS for as much functionality as possible: collapsed height can be set in CSS with the max-height
property; "collapsing" is achieved by setting overflow: hidden
on the containing block and changing the height
property; and, finally, the expanding/collapsing animation is done with CSS3 transitions.
By default, Readmore.js inserts the following CSS, in addition to some transition-related rules:
selector + [data-readmore-toggle], selector[data-readmore] {
display: block;
width: 100%;
}
selector
would be the element you invoked readmore()
on, e.g.: $('selector').readmore()
You can override the base rules when you set up Readmore.js like so:
$('article').readmore({blockCSS: 'display: inline-block; width: 50%;'});
If you want to include the necessary styling in your site's stylesheet, you can disable the dynamic embedding by setting embedCSS
to false
:
$('article').readmore({embedCSS: false});
If you wanted to set a maxHeight
based on lines, you could do so in CSS with something like:
body {
font: 16px/1.5 sans-serif;
}
/* Show only 4 lines in smaller screens */
article {
max-height: 6em; /* (4 * 1.5 = 6) */
}
Then, with a media query you could change the number of lines shown, like so:
/* Show 8 lines on larger screens */
@media screen and (min-width: 640px) {
article {
max-height: 12em;
}
}
Pull requests are always welcome, but not all suggested features will get merged. Feel free to contact me if you have an idea for a feature.
Pull requests should include the minified script and this readme and the demo HTML should be updated with descriptions of your new feature.
You'll need NPM:
$ npm install
Which will install the necessary development dependencies. Then, to build the minified script:
$ npm run build