jQuery(function( $ ){
	/**
	 * Most jQuery.localScroll's settings, actually belong to jQuery.ScrollTo, check it's demo for an example of each option.
	 * @see http://flesler.demos.com/jquery/scrollTo/
	 * You can use EVERY single setting of jQuery.ScrollTo, in the settings hash you send to jQuery.LocalScroll.
	 */
	
	// The default axis is 'y', but in this demo, I want to scroll both
	// You can modify any default like this
	$.localScroll.defaults.axis = 'x';
	
	// Scroll initially if there's a hash (#something) in the url 
	$.localScroll.hash({
		target: '.content-inner', // Could be a selector or a jQuery object too.
		queue:false,
		duration:1500,
    onBefore:function( e, anchor, $target ){
      $('.content').addClass('reading');
      $('.content-item').css({
        overflow:'hidden'
      }).fadeTo('slow', 0.15)
    },
    onAfter:function( anchor, settings ){
      $('.content-item').css({
        'overflow-y': 'auto'
      }).fadeTo('slow', 0.999);
      $(anchor).addClass('clicked');
    }

	});
	
	/**
	 * NOTE: I use $.localScroll instead of $('#navigation').localScroll() so I
	 * also affect the >> and << links. I want every link in the page to scroll.
	 */
	$.localScroll({
		target: '.content-inner', // could be a selector or a jQuery object too.
		queue:false,
		duration:1000,
		hash:true,
		onBefore:function( e, anchor, $target ){
			$('.content').addClass('reading');
      $('.content-item').css({
        overflow:'hidden'
      }).fadeTo('slow', 0.15)
		},
		onAfter:function( anchor, settings ){
			$('.content-item').css({
        'overflow-y': 'auto'
      }).fadeTo('slow', 0.999);
      $(anchor).addClass('clicked');
		}
	});
});