Microsoft improves the Scrollbar Scrolling in Chrome and Edge browsers

Generally, Scrollbar scrolling happens in the main thread in the Chrome browser, Microsoft which is contributing to Chromium has found scrolling the vertical scrollbar by dragging isn’t great when the main thread is busy. Microsoft has addressed this issue with Compositor Threaded Scrollbar scrolling feature in Chromium, as of now, the feature is enabled by default in Canary and Dev versions of Chrome and Microsoft Edge browsers. You can test, feel and see how responsive scrollbar scrolling in Edge or Chrome is by visiting the demo site created by Microsoft.

1. Visit about: flags page latest Chrome Dev/Canary or Microsoft Edge 82 Dev /Canary

2. Set the “Compositor Threaded Scrollbar Scrolling” flag to “Disabled” and restart the browser.

3. Visit this demo site

Compiste Threaded Scrollbar Scrolling demo site

4. Click on Start animation and further click on “Induce main thread jank”,

5. Now try to drag the scrollbar down, you’ll find it hard.

6.  Now change the above-mentioned flag to Default or Enabled and relaunch the browser.

7. If you now follow the 4th step, you’ll notice huge improvements in scrollbar scrolling despite the main thread being janky.

Do note Microsoft is still working on to bring more scrolling improvements to Chromium, for instance, we’ve covered about percent-based scrolling, here, the improvements are specifically landed for a scrollbar in Chrome and Edge browsers.

Related articles:

Microsoft Edge Dev build 80.0.328.4 available with Scrolling improvements and Crash fixes

Microsoft adds Edge-Style Scrolling to Google Chrome

Google tests a fix for Chrome’s Jelly Scrolling issue on Android and Desktop Platforms

Smooth Scrolling to Ship with Chrome 49 for Windows and Linux

Venkat Eswarlu

Venkat is an independent technology journalist and the founder of Techdows. He has been covering web browsers, Windows, and software news since 2009. His exclusive scoops on Chrome, Firefox, and Edge features have been cited by Forbes, TechCrunch, Wired, CNET, and other major publications.

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