This jQuery plugin allows you to show the user how long it will take to read the article considering the speed in which the user is scrolling.
Load the readremaining.jquery.js or the minified version readremaining.jquery.min.js after jQuery.
<script src="js/readremaining.jquery.js"></script>
Include the css file or the styles into your main css.
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/rr_light.css"/>
To speed up the loading, you can include the code of readremaining.jquery.js in your main js file instead.
Init ReadRemaining.js on the element that will be scrolled to read the article. Usually the body of the document.
$('body').readRemaining();
That's it.
You can customize the behavior of the gauge with these options:
$('body').readRemaining({
showGaugeDelay : 1000, // Delay before showing the indicator.
showGaugeOnStart : false, // Show the gauge initially, even before the user scroll.
timeFormat : '%mm %ss left', // Will replace %m and %s with minutes and seconds.
maxTimeToShow : 20*60, // Only show time if is lower than x minutes (multiplied to seconds).
minTimeToShow : 10, // Only show time if is higher than x seconds (If it's less than 10 seconds... just read).
gaugeContainer : '', // The element where the gauge will append. If left '', the container will be the same scrolling element.
insertPosition : 'prepend' // 'append' or 'prepend' as required by style
verboseMode : false // Enable the console logs. For testing only.
gaugeWrapper : '', // Optional, the element that define the visible scope for the gauge. If left "", the gauge will be visible all along.
topOffset : 0, // Distance between the top of the gaugeWrapper and the point where the gauge will start to appear. Some designs require this.
bottomOffset : 0 // Distance between bottom border where the box will appear and the bottom of the element.
});
You can get the remaining time for reading an element with ReadRemaining.js applied with the 'getRemainingTime' method. e.g.:
var remainingMinutes = $('body').readRemaining('getRemainingTime', {timeFormat : '%m'});
ReadRemaining.js works much more precise when the content of the scrolling element is homogeneous. If the size of the text or complexity of images change in different parts of the scrolling element, then the accuracy will drop.