1.1.1 • Published 10 months ago

vue3-img-lazyload v1.1.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
10 months ago

vue3-lazyload

Features

  • 0 dependencies: No worry about your bundle size
  • Type Strong: Written in Typescript
  • Support Hook: useLazyload

Installation

$ npm i vue3-img-lazyload
# or
$ yarn add vue3-img-lazyload

Usage

main.js:

import { createApp } from 'vue'
import VueLazyLoad from 'vue3-lazyload'
import App from './App.vue'

const app = createApp(App)
app.use(VueLazyLoad, {
  // options...
})
app.mount('#app')

App.vue:

<template>
  <img v-lazy="your image url" />
</template>

v-lazy use object params

<template>
  <img v-lazy="{ src: 'your image url', loading: 'your loading image url', error: 'your error image url' }">
</template>

Use lifecycle

In main.js

import { createApp } from 'vue'
import VueLazyLoad from 'vue3-lazyload'
import App from './App.vue'

const app = createApp(App)
app.use(VueLazyLoad, {
  loading: '',
  error: '',
  lifecycle: {
    loading: (el) => {
      console.log('loading', el)
    },
    error: (el) => {
      console.log('error', el)
    },
    loaded: (el) => {
      console.log('loaded', el)
    }
  }
})
app.mount('#app')

or

In xxx.vue

Have to be aware of is v-lazy don't use v-lazy="lazyOptions", in this case, vue cannot monitor data changes.

<script>
import { reactive } from 'vue'
export default {
  name: 'App',
  setup() {
    const lazyOptions = reactive({
      src: 'your image url',
      lifecycle: {
        loading: (el) => {
          console.log('image loading', el)
        },
        error: (el) => {
          console.log('image error', el)
        },
        loaded: (el) => {
          console.log('image loaded', el)
        }
      }
    })
    return {
      lazyOptions,
    }
  }
}
</script>

<template>
  <img v-lazy="{src: lazyOptions.src, lifecycle: lazyOptions.lifecycle}" width="100">
</template>

Use Hook

<script lang="ts">
import { ref } from 'vue'
import { useLazyload } from 'vue3-lazyload'
export default {
  name: 'App',
  setup() {
    const src = ref('/example/assets/logo.png')
    const lazyRef = useLazyload(src, {
      lifecycle: {
        loading: () => {
          console.log('loading')
        },
        error: () => {
          console.log('error')
        },
        loaded: () => {
          console.log('loaded')
        }
      }
    })
    return {
      lazyRef
    }
  }
}
</script>

<template>
  <img ref="lazyRef" class="image" width="100">
</template>

Use css state

There are three states while image loading.
You can take advantage of this feature, make different css controls for different states.

  • loading
  • loaded
  • error
<img src="..." lazy="loading">
<img src="..." lazy="loaded">
<img src="..." lazy="error">
<style>
  img[lazy=loading] {
    /*your style here*/
  }
  img[lazy=error] {
    /*your style here*/
  }
  img[lazy=loaded] {
    /*your style here*/
  }
</style>

Delay loading of images

To avoid loading images that are only shortly visible (e. g. fast scrolling through list of images), a delay in milliseconds can be configured. If a delay is set, an image is only loaded if it stays visible for the specified amount of time.

Set delay in object parameter:

<template>
  <img v-lazy="{ src: 'your image url', loading: 'your loading image url', error: 'your error image url', delay: 500 }">
</template>

Options

keydescriptiondefaulttype
loadingThe image used when the image is loaded-string
errorThe image used when the image failed to load-string
observerOptionsIntersectionObserver options{ rootMargin: '0px', threshold: 0.1 }IntersectionObserverInit
logDo print debug infotrueboolean
logLevelLog levelerror'error' | 'warn' | 'info' | 'debug' | 'log'
lifecycleSpecify state execution function-Lifecycle
delayTime in milliseconds an image has to stay visible before loading starts0number

Lifecycle Hooks

keydescription
loadingImage loading
loadedImage loaded
errorImage load error
1.1.1

10 months ago

1.1.0

10 months ago