1.0.0 • Published 5 years ago

ngx-joyride-demo v1.0.0

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-
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
5 years ago

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Angular Joyride

An Angular Tour (Joyride) library built entirely in Angular, without using any heavy external dependencies like Bootstrap or JQuery. From now on you can easily guide your users through your site showing them all the sections and features.

Demo

See the demo. Let's take a tour! :earth_americas:

Install

npm install ngx-joyride --save

or

yarn add ngx-joyride

Usage

1. Mark your HTML elements with the joyrideStep directive

  <!-- v. 2.x.x -->
  <h1 joyrideStep="firstStep" title="Page Title" text="Main title!">Text</h1>
  <div joyrideStep="secondStep" title="Page Title" text="Main title!">Div content</div>

  <!-- v. 1.x.x -->
  <h1 joyrideStep title="Page Title" text="Main title!" stepNumber="1">Text</h1>
  <div joyrideStep title="Page Title" text="Main title!" stepNumber="2">Div content</div>

2. Import the JoyrideModule in your AppModule

@NgModule({
	declarations: [AppComponent],
	imports: [
		JoyrideModule,
		BrowserModule
	],
	providers: [],
	bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

3. Inject the JoyrideService in your Component and start the Tour, passing the steps order list

// v. 2.x.x
@Component({
  selector: 'app-component',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {
  constructor(private readonly joyrideService: JoyrideService) { }

  onClick() {
    this.joyrideService.startTour(
      { steps: ['firstStep', 'secondStep']} // Your steps order
    );
  }
}

// v. 1.x.x
...
    this.joyrideService.startTour(); // You don't need steps property here.
...

4. En-joy :wink:

Directive Inputs/Outputs

You can use the joyrideStep directive with these inputs:

@InputRequiredPurposeValues/Type
joyrideStepYes, (Only from 2.x.x)The step name, it should be unique. This input is required from v. 2.0.0string
stepPositionNoThe position in which the step will be drawn.'top', 'right', 'bottom', 'left', 'center'
titleNoThe step title.string
textNoThe step text content.string
stepContentNoAn Angular template with custom contentTemplateRef\

N.B: Only for the older versions (1.x.x) change joyrideStep in stepNumber.

@InputRequiredPurposeValues/Type
stepNumberYes Only for 1.x.xThe order in which the step should appear during the tour.1, ..., n
@OutputRequiredPurpose
next (Only from 2.x.x)NoIt fires an event when 'Next' button is clicked.
prev (Only from 2.x.x)NoIt fires an event when 'Prev' button is clicked.
done (Only from 2.x.x)NoIt fires an event when 'Done' button or 'Close' are clicked and the Tour is finished.

Options

NameRequiredPurposeTypeDefault value
steps (Only from 2.x.x)YesRepresent the ordered list of steps name to show. e.g steps: ['step1', 'header', 'interesting-table', 'navbar']. This option is particularly useful for multi-pages navigation. If your step is not in the root path, you should indicate the route after the step name, with a @ as separator. E.g. : steps: ['firstStep', 'image@home', 'step4@about/you', 'user-avatar@user/details']string[]none
stepDefaultPositionNoDefine a step default position. The stepPositon set in the directive override this value.stringbottom
themeColorNoBackdrop, buttons and title color. (Hexadecimal value)string#3b5560
showCounterNoShow the counter on the bottom-left.booleantrue
showPrevButtonNoShow the "Prev" button.booleantrue
logsEnabledNoEnable logs to see info about the library status. Usuful to get a meaningful error message.booleanfalse

You can change each element step css overriding the default style.

How tos

Using Custom Content

If you'd like to use custom HTML content instead of simple text you can use the stepContent property instead of text. Let's see how.

<div joyrideStep="step1" [stepContent]="customContent">I'm the target element.</div>
<ng-template #customContent>
	... Insert whatever you'd like to ...
</ng-template>

How to set the options

this.joyrideService.startTour({
    steps: ['step1', 'my-step@home', 'lastStep@home'] // Available from v.2.0.0
    showPrevButton: false,
    stepDefaultPosition: 'top',
    themeColor: '#212f23'
});

How to listen for events (Available from v.2.0.0)

Mode 1: Using directive output events

@Component({
  selector: 'app-component',
  template: `<div joyrideStep="joy1" title="title" (prev)="onPrev()" (next)="onNext()">Hello!</div>
             <div joyrideStep="joy2" title="title2" (done)="onDone()">Hello!</div>`
})
export class AppComponent {
  constructor(private readonly joyrideService: JoyrideService) { }

  onClick() {
    this.joyrideService.startTour(
      { steps: ['joy1', 'joy2']} // Your steps order
    );
  }

  onNext(){
    // Do something
  }

  onPrev() {
    // Do something
  }

  onDone() {
    // Do something
  }
}

Mode 2: Subscribing to startTour

@Component({
  selector: 'app-component',
  template: `<div joyrideStep="joy1" title="title" (prev)="onPrev()" (next)="onNext()">Hello!</div>
             <div joyrideStep="joy2" title="title2" (done)="onDone()">Hello!</div>`
})
export class AppComponent {
  constructor(private readonly joyrideService: JoyrideService) { }

  onClick() {
    this.joyrideService.startTour({ steps: ['joy1', 'joy2']}).subscribe(
      (step) => { /*Do something*/},
      (error) => { /*handle error*/},
      () => { /*Tour is finished here, do something*/}
    );
  }
}

How to get Multi Pages Joyride navigation (Available from v.2.0.0)

If your steps are scattered among different pages you can now reach them, just add their name in the steps list followed by @route/to/page.

Lets suppose you have three steps:

  • navbar, located in the app root /
  • user-avatar, located in /user/details
  • info, located in /about

What you should do is adding your steps in this way:

...
    this.joyrideService.startTour({steps: ["navbar", "user-avatar@user/details", "info@about"]); 
...

NB: If you're using lazy modules, you should import the JoyrideModule in your AppModule using JoyrideModule.forRoot(). In your lazy loaded feature modules use JoyrideModule.forChild() instead.

Licence

MIT