0.5.3 • Published 4 years ago

vue-lazy-transition v0.5.3

Weekly downloads
4
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

Vue Lazy Transition Plugin

This is a minimal Vue plugin to enable transitions or animations on scroll using custom animations and transitions defined by you.

Table of contents

Install

npm

npm i vue-lazy-transition

yarn

yarn add vue-lazy-transition

Plugin Configuration

To use the plugin, you can choose to use the default configuration,

import Vue from 'vue'
import LazyTransition from 'vue-lazy-transition'

Vue.use(LazyTransition)

or configure it manually

import Vue from 'vue'
import LazyTransition from 'vue-lazy-transition'

// with default config
Vue.use(LazyTransition)
//OR
// with manual config
Vue.use(LazyTransition, {
  options: {
    root: null,
    rootMargin: '0px',
    threshold: [0.5, 0.75, 1]
  },
  intersectionRatio: 0.5
})

there are 4 items to configure:

  • root - (optional) - the element used as the viewport to check if elements to be transitioned are in view. if null or empty the default viewport will be used.
  • rootMargin - (optional) - margin around the root element
  • threshold - (optional) - a number or array of numbers between 0 and 1 representing the percentage of the element that must be in the viewport element before the observer triggers a transition
  • intersectionRatio - minimum threshold percentage for the observer declares an element is in the viewport

Usage

This Plugin can be used in two ways

Component

<template>
    <lazy-transition :name="'transition-name'">
        <your-component />
    </lazy-transition>
</template>

To apply lazy-transition effects using the component syntax, wrap the component you want to apply a transition to with the <lazy-transition></lazy-transition> component. The name property is the name of the transition or animation you want to apply to the element. The animation will be applied when the <lazy-transition> component enters the viewport.

For Example:

<lazy-transition :name="'transition-name'">
    <your-component />
</lazy-transition>

Directive

There are two lazy transition directives:

  • v-lazytransition
  • v-lazytransition-group
  • v-lazytransition-root

v-lazytransition

When you want to apply a vue transition to a single component or HTMLElement, you simply add the v-lazytransition directive and the name of the transition you created for the element.

<template>
   <your-component v-lazytransition="'transition-name'"></your-component>
</template>

you can use the object syntax to specify more functionality such as callbacks to be executed when the element comes into view, or if the transition is a vue trasition or a custom class you want to add to the element. or both :) discussed here(#Using Callbacks)

v-lazytransition-group

The v-lazytransition-group should be used when you want to apply transitions on all children nodes of a parent node.

for example

<template>
    <div class="parent" v-lazytransition-group="'custom-transition'">
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
    </div>
</template>

applying the v-lazytransition-group directive here will apply the custom-transition to each child of the parent element will perform the transition when each element enters the viewport.

using directives will bring better support for already made projects, as it doesn't add an extra component

v-lazytransition-root

the v-lazytransition-root is used to change the root of the observer or create an observer with the bound element as the root . it takes an object containing the name of the observer you wish to create. if you don\'t specify an object, it replaces the default observer root with itself.

<template>
    <div id="#app" v-lazytransition-root="{observer: 'foo'}">
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div class="child"> ... </div>
        <div ref="bar" > ... </div>
        <div class="child" v-lazytransition="{transition: 'bounce-out'}"> ... </div>
    </div>
</template>

this will create the observer 'foo' with the div with id #app as the root (of course the element has to be scrollable). you can then use that observer with the $lazyObserver.observeWith() method.

Specifying Transitions/Animations

This package uses the <transition> vue component under the hood for the component syntax, and the directive uses the same syntax for its transitions. Therefore, to create transitions you should follow the guide provided in the official docs.

One main difference with this and the regular <transition> component in the docs is it DOES NOT depend on a v-if you do not need a v-if statement to make the element appear then apply the transition (except the component syntax which has its own show property at the moment). the transition will be applied when the element enters the specified viewport provided in the configuration.

Here is an example of a transition named side-fade-left:

/*Transitions*/
.side-fade-left-enter-active{
   transition: all 300ms cubic-bezier(.5, .15, .28, .91);
 }

.side-fade-left-leave-active{
   transition: all 300ms cubic-bezier(.15, .5, .6, 1);
 }

.side-fade-left-enter,
.side-fade-left-leave-to {
   transform: translateX(100px);
   opacity: 0;
 }

To use this transition, bind the name to the name field of the lazytransition component

<lazy-transition :name="'side-fade-left'">
    <your-component />
</lazy-transition>

or as a directive, provide the name

<template>
    <div class="main">
        <your-component v-lazytransition="'side-fade-left'"></your-component>
    </div>
</template>

Using Callbacks

You can observe an element and provide a callback to be executed when it is in view using the global variable or the directive syntax

Directives

the v-lazytransition directive also takes an ObserverBinding object of the following syntax

type ObserverBinding = {
  transition?: string;
  isVue?: boolean;
  onView?: (el: BoundElement) => void;
  afterTransition?: (el: BoundElement) => void;
}

All fields are optional, you can specify one or the other.

  • transition: the transition to be applied when the element is in view. if unset, the observer ignores this property and no style change happens.
  • isVue: if true, then the transition will be treated as a vue transition, if false, it will add the transition string as a css class to the element when the element is in view. if unset, it defaults to true, then the transition will be treated as a vue transition.
  • onView: the callback to be executed when an element comes into view
  • afterTransition: the callback to be executed after the transition completes

Global Variable

the global variable can also be used with the ObserverBinding

export default Vue.extend({
  mounted () {
    const element = this.$refs.bar
    this.$lazyObserver.startObserving( element, {
      transition: 'side-fade',
      onView: (el: BoundElement) => {
        // do something
      },
      afterTransition: (el) => el.classList.append('bounce-out')
    })  
  }
})

Example

// this calls the setStatus method when <your-component/> enters the observer root
<template>
    <div class="main">
        <your-component v-lazytransition="{transition: 'side-fade-left', onView: this.setStatus}" />
    </div>
</template>

Adding an Observer

An observer can be added using the $lazyObserver.createObserver() method. this takes three parameters

  • name: The name/identifier of the observer
  • root: the root element for the observer
  • callback: the callback to be executed when an element observed by this observer intersects with the root element.

The Global Variable

the $lazyObserver instance variable gives access to the internal observer instance. you can use this to manually observe elements via refs or to manually dispose the observer.

when using the global variable, you can specify a callback to be executed when an element is in view or after a transition is finished. The global variable provides some useful methods as shown below

export declare class $lazyObserver {
  get observer (): IntersectionObserver

  get observerKey (): string

  createObserver (name: string, root?: BoundElement): void

  changeObserver (name: string, root?: BoundElement): void

  startObserving (el: BoundElement, binding: ObserverBinding): void

  observeWith (observer: string, el: BoundElement, binding: ObserverBinding): void

  stopObserving (el: BoundElement): void

  disposeObserver (): void
  
  killAll(): void
}

SETTING UP FOR DEVELOPMENT

clone the repository and run the dev server

git clone https://github.com/Recks11/VueLazyTransition.git LazyTransitions
cd LazyTransitions
npm install
npm run serve

License

MIT license