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Asked
10 years, 7 months ago
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@UweKeim, there's no trick for IE11
– daVe
Oct 28 '15 at 11:40
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There is no "none" option for overflow property. Available options include: visible, hidden, scroll, auto, inherit.
– Sergiy Sokolenko
Jul 21 '10 at 6:16
Actually, this is not completely the right answer : overflow:hidden doesn't "hide" the scrollbar. It also stop scrolling feature on the page. That's not exactly what we ask for.
– adriendenat
Mar 13 '13 at 21:41
In Chrome, when body overflow is set to hidden scrolling will work with a mouse scroller wheel. In Firefox, scrolling will not work with a mouse scroller wheel, it took me a while to figure this out.
– Doug Molineux
Aug 19 '13 at 20:17
I don't see the point in asserting that overflow: hidden disables scrolling. If someone wants to hide the scrollbar, then presumably they deem the control unnecessary because there is no content to scroll in the first place . Or perhaps they just don't want to allow scrolling altogether .
– BoltClock ♦
Nov 24 '14 at 16:33
To me the assertion is perfectly valid, as the question is to hide the scrollbar , not to disable scrolling .
– sboisse
Nov 25 '14 at 19:42
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Just what I was looking for since I really wanted to hide the scrollbars but have the elements still scrollable (e.g. up/down keys)
– Mathias
Jan 25 '13 at 20:35
this should be the best answer since other solutions don't let you scroll
– nuway
Apr 4 '13 at 20:53
Does this support other browsers apart from webkit? Because it does not work in mozilla.
– Rupam Datta
Apr 8 '13 at 6:25
There is a feature request on the Mozilla tracker though. You may be able to speed up the implementation by voting for it over there :)
– Peter
May 28 '13 at 7:14
THIS IS THE CORRECT ANSWER! As others are missing. The problem is not just hiding the scrollbar, but how the overflow affects other styles. I ran into this exact same problem in our app. We do NOT want overflow auto on 99% of the app, however there is a help section where you want the user to be able to scroll down. Since the body has overflow:hidden, the only wan to handle this was an ng-class on the root, or thanks to this guys, just using some CSS.
– Leon Gaban
Dec 15 '16 at 17:03
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This answer would apply to significantly more browsers (namely IE) rather than the currently upvoted answer.
– Matt Jensen
Sep 25 '14 at 17:15
Great addition. Actually implemented that same solution today! May be worth mentioning that the other element should be overflow: hidden;
– Matt Jensen
Sep 25 '14 at 22:51
This is the correct, full featured answer. I explains that if you simply want to stop a user from scrolling you can use the overflow rule. You can also implement your own home built scrolling feature. If that is not enough you can set scroll bar properties directly using different rules for different browsers.
– newshorts
Jul 12 '16 at 17:19
while this is an incredibly well-thought out answer, and very detailed, and many resources linked, there are massive problems for assistive technology users when you disable scroll and use javascript to handle all the scrolling. If you do not also set focus to an element every time you scroll for the user, then your AT user will be completely lost. Also, your user has now lost all fine-tuned control over what (s)he sees. Very poor UX to take over scrolling for your user.
– ShiningLight
Sep 25 '18 at 17:47
Firefox Quantum 63.0.1 on MacOS High Sierra, doesn't hide the scrollbar even with the 'overflow: -moz-scrollbars-none' rule. Anyone knows solution for this? All the other browser seem to work with the suggested solutions.
– Simona Adriani
Nov 7 '18 at 11:52
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This should be the accepted answer imo. Only thing i had to add was height: inherited in the .viewport css.
– Post Impatica
Oct 27 '15 at 14:38
The only problem with this answer is the "dead" space left by the moved scrollbar, because we don't know actually the scrollbar width, in order to subtracts it from the padding.
– Frondor
Apr 26 '16 at 23:13
Plus, you don't need to use fixed values for the padding and margins. 100% is more versatile and does the job.
– Frondor
Apr 26 '16 at 23:29
Worked in IE11, Operah and Chrome, haven't tested Firefox yet. This is great answer, +1.
– almost a beginner
Dec 6 '16 at 1:39
why -100px and 100px ??
– oldboy
Jun 21 '19 at 2:07
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most underrated answer on here
– AGrush
May 4 '19 at 21:56
Only solution that fixed my scroll-nightmare :D Thanks!
– boomdrak
Jan 22 '20 at 13:07
this solution is from w3schools.com/howto/howto_css_hide_scrollbars.asp
– Jorge Dieguez Perez
Nov 16 '20 at 21:03
According to archive.org, this answer pre-dates that page. And when that page was launched, it didn't have this solution. So I think W3 Schools's solution is from Stack Overflow ;)
– Wilf
Nov 17 '20 at 22:23
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Unfortunately, this doesn't work in FireFox 48.0.2 on macOS Sierra. If you do overflow: -moz-scrollbars-none; then you successfully remove the scrollbar, but you also remove the ability to scroll. You might as well just set overflow: hidden to the .container .
– Martyn Chamberlin
Oct 19 '16 at 20:27
Oh, and from developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/overflow , we read this about -moz-scrollbars-none : "This is an obsolete API and is no longer guaranteed to work."
– Martyn Chamberlin
Oct 19 '16 at 20:30
I have updated my answer with the latest support for Firefox :)
– Hristo Eftimov
Apr 1 '19 at 6:48
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Works for me in chrome and firefox, haven't tested IE or any other browser. jsfiddle.net/8xtfk729
– Ben Davis
Jan 19 '15 at 4:31
On chrome (v54 at least), this disables scrolling via scroll wheel for some reason. Scroll via arrow keys, home/end/pg down/pg up, touch flick, and mouse 3 click n drag still works.
– House3272
Dec 6 '16 at 0:26
This answer is legit, it actually works and appears to work across browsers.
– Sam
Jan 9 '18 at 21:06
That hides the whole div on my side
– Jonny
Feb 13 '18 at 22:48
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his answer doesnt work on Chrome and Safari in iOS 12.3
– oldboy
Jun 21 '19 at 2:04
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This is the correct answer and should be first. Everything above this does not answer the question at hand. OP does not ask for scrolling disabled, zhe wants to hide the scrollbar.
– pixelpax
Mar 27 '17 at 21:31
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this doesnt actually work in Chrome and Safari on iOS
– oldboy
Jun 21 '19 at 1:58
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an explanation as to how this works would be appreciated – playing with parent/child visibility to hide the scroll bar is horrible
– JackyJohnson
Nov 7 '16 at 12:23
@believesInSanta I added comments and codepen to explain better. I don't agree with your assessment that playing with visibility is a horrible way to hide the scrollbar. I understand that it is a hack, but the proper way to achieve this effect would be if all the browsers supported a way to style the scrollbar separately like chrome and safari allow.
– Blake Plumb
Nov 10 '16 at 19:32
I just felt in love with your solution. It perfectly works (used in apps which are design to be used by modern browsers). Thank you so much!
– Maxime Lafarie
Aug 1 '17 at 22:36
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Unrelated note (as far as the question goes). In this instance, you should be using @extend versus @include. So instead of @mixin{} , you'd do %size{} then in the css selectors, call @extend %size; . Mixins are typically used when your pulling in variables to return an result. Placeholders (aka @extend) are meant for simple repeated code like this - where no "function" is needed.
– Mike Barwick
Dec 12 '14 at 4:24
I edited to use @extend. The result is probably less understandable to people who don't know SCSS, but well enough.
– Seth W. Klein
Mar 12 '15 at 20:35
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I can't remember exactly since it was a couple of months ago, but I believe setting the overflow on the body was working in Chrome, but not Firefox (or vice-versa). Using the HTML tag worked on both, though.
– Brad Azevedo
Oct 8 '12 at 16:30
From memory this may be a quirks mode difference.
– thomasrutter
Sep 21 '13 at 1:43
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Scrolljacking works, but is almost always a poor user experience.
– Brandon Anzaldi
Jan 3 '15 at 19:04
while this is possible, with a good example, there are massive problems for assistive technology users when you disable scroll and use javascript to handle scrolling. If you do not also set focus to an element every time you scroll for the user, then your AT user will be completely lost. Also, every user has now lost all fine-tuned control over what (s)he sees. Very poor UX to take over scrolling for your user. Besides mousewheel, you also have to handle up/down keys, screen reader rotors, mouse clicks, and touchpad controls. This becomes unwieldy for the developer and awful for the user.
– ShiningLight
Sep 25 '18 at 17:50
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Good link. It is nice to know how the result on multi browsers. Unfortunately the figure for a screenshot of the finished results are broken
– Chetabahana
Sep 3 '15 at 7:25
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Highly active question . Earn 10 reputation in order to answer this question. The reputation requirement helps protect this question from spam and non-answer activity.
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Can CSS be used to hide the scroll bar? How would you do this?
Set overflow: hidden; on the body tag like this:
The code above hides both the horizontal and vertical scrollbar.
If you want to hide only the vertical scrollbar , use overflow-y :
And if you want to hide only the horizontal scrollbar , use overflow-x :
Note: It'll also disable the scrolling feature. Refer to the below answers if you just want to hide the scroll bar, but not the scroll feature.
WebKit supports scrollbar pseudo elements that can be hidden with standard CSS rules:
If you want all scrollbars hidden, use
I'm not sure about restoring - this did work, but there might be a right way to do it:
You can of course always use width: 0 , which can then be easily restored with width: auto , but I'm not a fan of abusing width for visibility tweaks.
Firefox 64 now supports the experimental scrollbar-width property by default (63 requires a configuration flag to be set). To hide the scrollbar in Firefox 64:
To see if your current browser supports either the pseudo element or scrollbar-width , try this snippet:
(Note that this is not really a correct answer to the question, because it hides the horizontal bars as well, but that's what I was looking for when Google pointed me here, so I figured I'd post it anyway.)
When you ask the question, "Can the scroll-bars of a browser be removed in some way, rather than simply hidden or camouflaged", everyone will say "Not possible" because it is not possible to remove the scrollbars from all browsers in a compliant and cross-compatible way, and then there's the whole argument of usability.
However, it is possible to prevent the browser from ever having the need to generate and display scrollbars if you do not allow your webpage to overflow.
This just means that we have to proactively substitute the same behavior that the browser would typically do for us and tell the browser thanks but no thanks buddy. Rather than try to remove scrollbars (which we all know is not possible) we can avoid scrolling (perfectly feasible) and scroll within the elements that we make and have more control over.
Create a div with overflow hidden. Detect when the user attempts to scroll, but is unable to because we've disabled the browsers ability to scroll with overflow: hidden.. and instead move the content up using JavaScript when this occurs. Thereby creating our own scrolling without the browsers default scrolling or use a plugin like iScroll .
For the sake of being thorough; all the vendor specific ways of manipulating scroll-bars:
*These properties were never part of the CSS specification, nor were they ever approved or vendor prefixed, but they work in Internet Explorer and Konqueror. These can also be set locally in the user style sheet for each application. In Internet Explorer you find it under the "Accessibility" tab, in Konqueror under the "Stylesheets" tab.
As of Internet Explorer 8 these properties were vendor prefixed by Microsoft, but they were still never approved by W3C .
Internet Explorer makes scroll available which sets whether or not to disable or enable scroll bars; it can also be used to get the value of the position of the scroll bars.
With Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 and later, when you use the !DOCTYPE declaration to specify standards-compliant mode, this attribute applies to the HTML element. When standards-compliant mode is not specified, as with earlier versions of Internet Explorer, this attribute applies to the BODY element, NOT the HTML element.
It's also worth noting that when working with .NET the ScrollBar class in System.Windows.Controls.Primitives in the Presentation framework is responsible for rendering the scrollbars.
WebKit extensions related to scroll-bar customization are:
These can each be combined with additional pseudo-selectors:
addWindowScrollHandler
public static HandlerRegistration addWindowScrollHandler(Window.ScrollHandler handler)
Mozilla does have some extensions for manipulating the scroll-bars, but they are all recommended not to be used.
-moz-hidden-unscrollable Only works internally within a users profile settings. Disables scrolling XML root elements and disables using arrow keys and mouse wheel to scroll web pages.
This is not really useful as far as I know, but it's worth noting that the attribute which controls whether or not scrollbars are displayed in Firefox is ( reference link ):
As has been previously mentioned in some other answers, here is an illustration which is sufficiently self-explanatory.
Just because I'm curious, I wanted to learn about the origin of scrollbars, and these are the best references I found.
The scrollbar BarProp object is a child of the window object and represents the user interface element that contains a scrolling mechanism, or some similar interface concept. window.scrollbars.visible will return true if the scroll bars are visible.
The History API also includes features for scroll restoration on page navigation to persist the scroll position on page load.
window.history.scrollRestoration can be used to check the status of scrollrestoration or change its status (appending ="auto"/"manual" . Auto is the default value. Changing it to manual means that you as the developer will take ownership of any scroll changes that may be required when a user traverses the app's history. If you need to, you can keep track of the scroll position as you push history entries with history.pushState().
You can accomplish this with a wrapper div that has its overflow hidden, and the inner div set to auto .
To remove the inner div 's scroll bar, you can pull it out of the outer div 's viewport by applying a negative margin to the inner div . Then apply equal padding to the inner div so that the content stays in view.
Here's my solution, which theoretically covers all modern browsers:
html can be replaced with any element you want to hide the scrollbar of.
Note : I've skimmed the other 19 answers to see if the code I'm posting has already been covered, and it seems like no single answer sums up the situation as it stands in 2019, although plenty of them go into excellent detail. Apologies if this has been said by someone else and I missed it.
This works for me with simple CSS properties:
For older versions of Firefox, use: overflow: -moz-scrollbars-none;
I think I found a workaround for you guys if you're still interested. This is my first week, but it worked for me...
If you're looking for a solution to hide a scrollbar for mobile devices, follow Peter's answer !
Here's a jsfiddle , which uses the solution below to hide a horizontal scrollbar.
It was tested on a Samsung tablet with Android 4.0.4 (Ice Cream Sandwich, both in the native browser and Chrome) and on an iPad with iOS 6 (both in Safari and Chrome).
As the other people already said, use CSS overflow .
But if you still want the user to be able to scroll that content (without the scrollbar being visible) you have to use JavaScript.
This will work the same for Internet Explorer 10:
Cross browser approach to hiding the scrollbar.
It was tested on Edge, Chrome, Firefox, and Safari
Hide scrollbar while still being able to scroll with mouse wheel!
If you want scrolling to work, before hiding scrollbars, consider styling
them. Modern versions of OS X and mobile OS's have scrollbars that, while
impractical for grabbing with a mouse, are quite beautiful and neutral.
To hide scrollbars, a technique by John Kurlak works well except for leaving
Firefox users who don't have touchpads with no way to scroll unless they
have a mouse with a wheel, which they probably do, but even then they can usually
only scroll vertically.
John's technique uses three elements:
It must be possible to set the size of the outer and content elements the same
which eliminates using percentages, but I can't think of anything else that
won't work with the right tweaking.
My biggest concern is whether all versions of browsers set scrollbars to make
visible overflowed content visible. I have tested in current browsers, but
not older ones.
OS X is 10.6.8. Windows is Windows 7.
I just thought I'd point out to anyone else reading this question that setting overflow: hidden (or overflow-y) on the body element didn't hide the scrollbars for me.
Copy this CSS code to the customer code for hiding the scroll bar:
Add this to your div where you want to hide the scrollbar:
I wrote a WebKit version with some options like auto hide , little version , scroll only-y , or only-x :
To disable the vertical scroll bar, just add overflow-y:hidden; .
My answer will scroll even when overflow:hidden; , using jQuery:
For example, scroll horizontally with the mouse wheel:
I believe you can manipulate it with the overflow CSS attribute, but they have limited browser support. One source said it was Internet Explorer 5 (and later), Firefox 1.5 (and later), and Safari 3 (and later) - maybe enough for your purposes.
Can CSS be used to hide the scroll bar? How would you do this?
If you wish to remove vertical (and horizontal) scrollbars from a browser viewport, add:
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