A react hook to use the scroll information of an element.
npm install react-element-scroll-hook
// Import the hook
import useScrollInfo from 'react-element-scroll-hook';
function Mycomponent(props) {
  // Initialize the hook
  const [scrollInfo, setRef] = useScrollInfo();
  // Use the scrollInfo at will
  console.log(scrollInfo);
  // use setRef to indicate the element you want to monitor
  return (
    <div id="content" ref={setRef}>
      {props.children}
    </div>
  );
}
When using this hook, you'll get an object containing the scroll data. It has two keys, x and y, each of them contain the following keys:
- value: amount of pixels scrolled
 - total: amount of pixels that can be scrolled
 - percentage: a value from 0 to 1 or 
nullif there's no scroll - className: a string to identify the state of the scroll
 - direction: the direction of the last scroll: 1 for down/right, -1 for up/left, 0 for initial value
 
For the y axis, className can take 4 values:
scroll-top, scroll-middle-y, scroll-bottom, and no-scroll-y.
For the x axis, the values are:
scroll-left, scroll-middle-x, scroll-right, and no-scroll-x.
{
  x: {
    percentage: 0.5,
    value: 120,
    total: 240,
    className: 'scroll-middle-x',
    direction: 1
  },
  y: {
    percentage: 1,
    value: 200,
    total: 200,
    className: 'scroll-bottom',
    direction: -1
  }
}
In this basic example, we'll add the scroll Y className to a component, to later style it with CSS based on weather it's scrolle or not.
// Import the hook
import useScrollInfo from 'react-element-scroll-hook';
function Mycomponent(props) {
  // Initialize the hook
  const [scrollInfo, setRef] = useScrollInfo();
  return (
    <div id="content" ref={setRef} className={scrollInfo.y.className}>
      {props.children}
    </div>
  );
}
If you also need to access the monitored element, you can use the third constant returned by useScrollInfo:
function Mycomponent(props) {
  // Initialize the hook
  const [scrollInfo, setRef, ref] = useScrollInfo();
  // Do something with the element
  console.log(ref.current);
  return (
    <div id="content" ref={setRef}>
      {props.children}
    </div>
  );
}
This should work out of the box on all major browser, including Edge. However, it uses ResizeObserver to work completely flawless. If you want it to work on older browsers properly when the element is resized (but the viewport isn't), you'll need a ResizeObserver polyfill.