Aljullu / react-lazy-load-image-component

React Component to lazy load images and components using a HOC to track window scroll position.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/react-lazy-load-image-component
MIT License
1.46k stars 110 forks source link
hoc intersection-observer intersectionobserver lazy-loading lazyload lazyload-images react react-component react-lazy react-lazy-load react-lazy-module react-performance reactjs server-side-rendering ssr
React Lazy Load Image Component Logo

React Lazy Load Image Component

React Component to lazy load images and other components/elements. Supports IntersectionObserver and includes a HOC to track window scroll position to improve performance.

"An easy-to-use performant solution to lazy load images in React"

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Live demo (code)

Features

Installation

# Yarn
$ yarn add react-lazy-load-image-component

# NPM
$ npm i --save react-lazy-load-image-component

LazyLoadImage usage

import React from 'react';
import { LazyLoadImage } from 'react-lazy-load-image-component';

const MyImage = ({ image }) => (
  <div>
    <LazyLoadImage
      alt={image.alt}
      height={image.height}
      src={image.src} // use normal <img> attributes as props
      width={image.width} />
    <span>{image.caption}</span>
  </div>
);

export default MyImage;

Props

Prop Type Default Description
onLoad Function Function called when the image has been loaded. This is the same function as the onLoad of an <img> which contains an event object.
afterLoad Function Deprecated, use onLoad instead. This prop is only for backward compatibility.
beforeLoad Function Function called right before the placeholder is replaced with the image element.
delayMethod String throttle Method from lodash to use to delay the scroll/resize events. It can be throttle or debounce.
delayTime Number 300 Time in ms sent to the delayMethod.
effect String Name of the effect to use. Please, read next section with an explanation on how to use them.
placeholder ReactClass <span> React element to use as a placeholder.
placeholderSrc String Image src to display while the image is not visible or loaded.
threshold Number 100 Threshold in pixels. So the image starts loading before it appears in the viewport.
useIntersectionObserver Boolean true Whether to use browser's IntersectionObserver when available.
visibleByDefault Boolean false Whether the image must be visible from the beginning.
wrapperClassName String In some occasions (for example, when using a placeholderSrc) a wrapper span tag is rendered. This prop allows setting a class to that element.
wrapperProps Object null Props that should be passed to the wrapper span when it is rendered (for example, when using placeholderSrc or effect)
... Any other image attribute

Using effects

LazyLoadImage includes several effects ready to be used, they are useful to add visual candy to your application, but are completely optional in case you don't need them or want to implement you own effect.

They rely on CSS and the corresponding CSS file must be imported:

import React from 'react';
import { LazyLoadImage } from 'react-lazy-load-image-component';
import 'react-lazy-load-image-component/src/effects/blur.css';

const MyImage = ({ image }) => (
  <LazyLoadImage
    alt={image.alt}
    effect="blur"
    wrapperProps={{
        // If you need to, you can tweak the effect transition using the wrapper style.
        style: {transitionDelay: "1s"},
    }}
    src={image.src} />
);

The current available effects are:

Screenshot of the blur effect

Screenshot of the black-and-white effect

Screenshot of the opacity effect

All the effects have a transition duration of 0.3 seconds by default, without transition delay and the default transition timing function. All those values can be modified overriding the wrapper style as shown in the code example above.

LazyLoadComponent usage

import React from 'react';
import { LazyLoadComponent } from 'react-lazy-load-image-component';
import { ArticleContent, ArticleComments } from 'my-app';

const Article = ({ articleId }) => (
  <div>
    <ArticleContent id={articleId} />
    <LazyLoadComponent>
      <ArticleComments id={articleId} />
    </LazyLoadComponent>
  </div>
);

export default Article;

Props

Prop Type Default Description
afterLoad Function Function called after the component has been rendered.
beforeLoad Function Function called right before the component is rendered.
delayMethod String throttle Method from lodash to use to delay the scroll/resize events. It can be throttle or debounce.
delayTime Number 300 Time in ms sent to the delayMethod from lodash.
placeholder ReactClass <span> React element to use as a placeholder.
threshold Number 100 Threshold in pixels. So the component starts loading before it appears in the viewport.
useIntersectionObserver Boolean true Whether to use browser's IntersectionObserver when available.
visibleByDefault Boolean false Whether the component must be visible from the beginning.

Using trackWindowScroll HOC to improve performance

When you have many elements to lazy load in the same page, you might get poor performance because each one is listening to the scroll/resize events. In that case, it's better to wrap the deepest common parent of those components with a HOC to track those events (trackWindowScroll).

For example, if we have an App which renders a Gallery, we would wrap the Gallery component with the HOC.

import React from 'react';
import { LazyLoadImage, trackWindowScroll }
  from 'react-lazy-load-image-component';

const Gallery = ({ images, scrollPosition }) => (
  <div>
    {images.map((image) =>
      <LazyLoadImage
        key={image.key}
        alt={image.alt}
        height={image.height}
        // Make sure to pass down the scrollPosition,
        // this will be used by the component to know
        // whether it must track the scroll position or not
        scrollPosition={scrollPosition}
        src={image.src}
        width={image.width} />
    )}
  </div>
);
// Wrap Gallery with trackWindowScroll HOC so it receives
// a scrollPosition prop to pass down to the images
export default trackWindowScroll(Gallery);

You must set the prop scrollPosition to the lazy load components. This way, they will know the scroll/resize events are tracked by a parent component and will not subscribe to them.

Props

LazyLoadImage

Prop Type Default Description
scrollPosition Object Object containing x and y with the curent window scroll position. Required.
onLoad Function Function called when the image has been loaded. This is the same function as the onLoad of an <img> which contains an event object.
afterLoad Function Deprecated, use onLoad instead. This prop is only for backward compatibility.
beforeLoad Function Function called right before the image is rendered.
placeholder ReactClass <span> React element to use as a placeholder.
threshold Number 100 Threshold in pixels. So the image starts loading before it appears in the viewport.
visibleByDefault Boolean false Whether the image must be visible from the beginning.
wrapperProps Object null Props that should be passed to the wrapper span when it is rendered (for example, when using placeholderSrc or effect)
... Any other image attribute

Component wrapped with trackWindowScroll (in the example, Gallery)

Prop Type Default Description
delayMethod String throttle Method from lodash to use to delay the scroll/resize events. It can be throttle or debounce.
delayTime Number 300 Time in ms sent to the delayMethod from lodash.
useIntersectionObserver Boolean true Whether to use browser's IntersectionObserver when available.

Notice you can do the same replacing LazyLoadImage with LazyLoadComponent.

When to use visibleByDefault?

The prop visibleByDefault makes the LazyLoadImage to behave like a normal <img>. Why is it useful, then?

Imagine you are going to lazy-load an image you have already loaded in the same page. In that case, there is no need to lazy-load it because it's already stored in the cache of the user's browser. You can directly display it.

Maybe the following code snippet will make it more clear:

import React from 'react';
import { LazyLoadImage, trackWindowScroll }
  from 'react-lazy-load-image-component';

const Gallery = ({ images, scrollPosition }) => (
  <div>
    // We are loading landscape.jpg here
    <img src="https://github.com/Aljullu/react-lazy-load-image-component/raw/master/landscape.jpg" alt="Beautiful landscape" />
    {images.map((image) =>
      <LazyLoadImage
        key={image.key}
        alt={image.alt}
        scrollPosition={scrollPosition}
        src={image.src}
        // If the image we are creating here has the same src than before,
        // we can directly display it with no need to lazy-load.
        visibleByDefault={image.src === '/landscape.jpg'} />
    )}
  </div>
);

export default trackWindowScroll(Gallery);

Demos

Screenshot of the react-lazy-load-image-component in use

Common errors

All images are being loaded at once

This package loads images when they are visible in the viewport. Before an image is loaded, it occupies 0x0 pixels, so if you have a gallery of images, that means all images will be in the visible part of the page until the first ones load and start pushing down the other ones.

To fix this issue, make sure you either set a height and width props or a placeholder to your images.

Effects are not working

You need to import the effect CSS as shown in the Using effects code example.

Also, notice browsers might behave differently while images are loading. Some times, while an image is not completely loaded yet, the browser will show a white background behind it, making the effect not to be visible. This is an issue with browsers and not something that can be fixed in this package.

Warning: setState(...): Can only update a mounted or mounting component.

That warning might appear if there are two components using trackWindowScroll at the same time. Notice it's not possible to have a LazyLoadImage/LazyLoadComponent inside another LazyLoadComponent for now. Also, make sure you are passing down scrollPosition to all components wrapped inside trackWindowScroll.