Best way to preload images with Angular.js

被刻印的时光 ゝ 提交于 2019-11-28 03:35:37
Michal Charemza

Having the 2 urls on the directive seems a touch overcomplicated. What I think is better is to write a directive that works like:

<img ng-src="{{bannerUrl}}" spinner-on-load />

And the directive can watch ng-src and (for example) set visibility:false with a spinner until the image has loaded. So something like:

scope: {
  ngSrc: '='
},
link: function(scope, element) {
  element.on('load', function() {
    // Set visibility: true + remove spinner overlay
  });
  scope.$watch('ngSrc', function() {
    // Set visibility: false + inject temporary spinner overlay
  });
}

This way the element behaves very much like a standard img with an ng-src attribute, just with a bit of extra behaviour bolted on.

http://jsfiddle.net/2CsfZ/47/

If anyone is interested this is my final solution: I use twitter bootstrap. So added class of "fade" to all images and just toggling class "in" with directive to fade in and out when image is loaded

angular.module('myApp').directive('imgPreload', ['$rootScope', function($rootScope) {
    return {
      restrict: 'A',
      scope: {
        ngSrc: '@'
      },
      link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        element.on('load', function() {
          element.addClass('in');
        }).on('error', function() {
          //
        });

        scope.$watch('ngSrc', function(newVal) {
          element.removeClass('in');
        });
      }
    };
}]);

<img img-preload class="fade" ng-src="{{imgSrc}}">

Working example: http://ishq.org

If you want you can pass the image fail and image loader as attributes for the directive....

myApp.directive("mySrc", function() {
    return {
      link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        var img, loadImage;
        var IMAGE_LOAD="123.jpg";
        var IMAGE_FAIL="123.jpg";
        img = null;

        loadImage = function() {

          element[0].src = IMAGE_LOAD;

          img  = new Image();
          img.src = attrs.mySrc;

          img.onload = function() {
            element[0].src = attrs.mySrc;
          };
          img.onerror=function ()
          {
              element[0].src = IMAGE_FAIL;
          }
        };

        loadImage();


      }
    };
  });

I think this is perhaps the most elegant solution because the directive actually creates the spinner and removes it automatically:

app.directive('spinnerLoad', [function spinnerLoad() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function spinnerLoadLink(scope, elem, attrs) {
            scope.$watch('ngSrc', function watchNgSrc() {
                elem.hide();
                elem.after('<i class="fa fa-spinner fa-lg fa-spin"></i>');  // add spinner
            });
            elem.on('load', function onLoad() {
                elem.show();
                elem.next('i.fa-spinner').remove(); // remove spinner
            });
        }
    };
}]);

Here is the html:

<img ng-src='{{imgUrl}}' spinner-load />

Note: you'll need to be using font-awesome for this to work as described here

Just to share ^^

 //css
.media-box{
                position: relative;
                width:220px;
                height: 220px;
                overflow: hidden;
            }
            .media-box div{
                position: absolute;
                left: 0;
                top: 0;
            }
            .spinner{
                position: absolute;
                left: 0;
                top: 0;
                background: #CCC url(./spinner.gif) no-repeat center center;
                display: block;
                width:220px;
                height: 220px;
            }
            .feed img.spinner-show{
                visibility: visible;
            }
            .feed img.spinner-hide{
                visibility: hidden;
            }

//html
<div class="media-box">
  <div>
    <img data-ng-src="{{item.media}}" alt="" title="" data-spinner-on-load>
  </div>
</div>

//js
.directive('spinnerOnLoad', function() {
            return {
                restrict: 'A',
                link: function(scope,element){
                    element.on('load', function() {
                        element.removeClass('spinner-hide');
                        element.addClass('spinner-show');
                        element.parent().find('span').remove();
                    });
                    scope.$watch('ngSrc', function() {
                        element.addClass('spinner-hide');
                        element.parent().append('<span class="spinner"></span>');
                    });      
                }
            }
        });

Instead of using

element.on('load', function() {});

use imagesLoaded plugin. It will speed up dramatically your images.

So the final code would be:

link: function(scope, element) {
  imagesLoaded(element, function() {

  });
  scope.$watch('ngSrc', function() {

  });
}

I have this directive which shows a spinner when img-src changes:

<img-with-loading
      img-src="{{src}}"
      spinner-class="{{spinnerClass}}"
/>

Code here: http://jsfiddle.net/ffabreti/yw74upyr/

images can be preloaded on route change by using image-preloader factory and resolve:

// call REST
                    return getContent.get().$promise.then(function(response) {

                                //return response;

                                // preload images from response
                                var imageLocations = [
                                  // put image(s) from response to array
                                  response.PostImage.big[0],
                                ];

                                // check do we have (all) image(s) in array
                                console.log(imageLocations);

                                // return when all images are preloaded
                                return preloader.preloadImages( imageLocations )
                                .then(function() {

                                    //if it was success 
                                    return response;
                                },
                                function() {

                                        //if it failed 
                                    return response;
                                });

                            });

complete tutorial here: https://www.coditty.com/code/angular-preload-images-on-route-change-by-using-resolve

Guinness

A simple solution I've found is to change the url to '//:0' before assigning it's new value

$scope.bannerUrl = 'initial value'; 

// When we want to change it
$scope.bannerUrl = '//:0';  // remove the previous img so it's not visible while the new one loads
$scope.bannerUrl = scope.preloadedUrl
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