I think we really have to take a step back away from this annoying scrolling / auto-moving element behavior for product info pages. I had a moment where my mouse was chasing a moving 'Loans' tile.
Designers have gotten really carried away. This stuff looks nice when you click through it in Figma, because it's a slideshow. But when it's interactive it's a pain in the butt.
If you move through the page really slowly it sort of works, but real people in the real world scroll fast to scan the content of the page, and this page is a disaster to scan.
Here I want to learn about the features of Square Banking but I can't do so at a glance, on the landing page for Square Banking. The best solution is to just give up and search Google News for a summary:
I wouldn't call Square's site "scroll hijacking" - usually we use that to refer to when the actual native scroll behaviour/events are highjacked and prevented, and custom javascript scrolling happens. Instead on the Square site the DOM page is still scrolling natively, but an animation is progressed depending on the native page position. Maybe not ideal, but its much smoother and less jarring than actual scroll jacking.
> For instance, it is easy for a user to land at an awkward scroll position which leaves an item partially on-screen when panning.
> To this end, this module introduces scroll snap positions which enforce the scroll positions that a scroll container’s scrollport may end at after a scrolling operation has completed.
Which is exactly what this page is doing.
> primarily a touch interaction
It's exclusively a scroll interaction, whether the pointer event is the result of mouse or touch input.
> the DOM page is still scrolling natively
I'm not sure what you're trying to say by "DOM page." JS is reacting to the scroll position of the viewport. The user experience is the same.
Sorry to disagree. The interaction you see in the page is not scroll snapping.
With scroll snapping you the user have always control of the scrollable content. What you do not have control over is where it will stop scrolling. A similar behavior to forced guides in a movable element on rails (such as drawers).
This page doesn’t scroll at all, and uses the scroll as a time control for a “movie”. And that is scroll jacking, as it hijacks the scroll position to do something completely different.
This page, at least on mobile, is also guilty of implementing it in the worst way possible: without any alternative scroll indications and without smooth continuous transitions that make it clear that you are controlling the animation through the scroll.
Apple is somewhat better at doing this since the scrolljacking procedure usually brings you to an element which, at the end of a glamourous entrance, actually scrolls away with the page.
I tried scrolling that demo with my mouse wheel and it "snapped" quite spastically down to 4. Even once I realized what the intended behavior was, it was still difficult to control: https://youtu.be/1A1c51GFGoc
Seems to work as intended with the touchpad, to the point where it was hard to even tell that the browser was doing something different.
From my experience, scroll snapping is quite nice. On the mobile view of https://www.nytimes.com/, if you scroll down enough, you'll find an example of a scroll snapping row of opinion pieces.
It is 10x better than scroll jacking. Scroll jacking is so repulsive to see anywhere you aren't using a mouse wheel.
On the other hand, at least if it's in CSS, it'll be a single standard method that you can turn off via a browser plugin or whatever, rather than everyone rolling their own.
If you move through the page really slowly it sort of works, but real people in the real world scroll fast to scan the content of the page, and this page is a disaster to scan.