An automatic web page progress bar.
Include pace.js and the theme css of your choice on your page (as early as possible), and you're done!
Pace will automatically monitor your ajax requests, event loop lag, document ready state, and elements on your page to decide the progress. On ajax navigation it will begin again!
If you use AMD or Browserify, require pace.js and call pace.start()
as early in the loading process as possible.
<head>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pace-js@latest/pace.min.js"></script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pace-js@latest/pace-theme-default.min.css">
</head>
Pace is fully automatic, no configuration is necessary to get started.
If you would like to make some tweaks, here's how:
You can set window.paceOptions
before bringing in the file:
paceOptions = {
// Disable the 'elements' source
elements: false,
// Only show the progress on regular and ajax-y page navigation,
// not every request
restartOnRequestAfter: false
}
You can also put options on the script tag:
<script data-pace-options='{ "ajax": false }' src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pace-js@latest/pace.min.js"></script>
If you're using AMD or Browserify, you can pass your options to start
:
define(['pace'], function(pace){
pace.start({
document: false
});
});
Pace includes a bunch of themes to get you started. Just include the appropriate css file. Send us a PR with any interesting themes you create.
If you have minor styling changes and don't want to extend theme css, you can add custom class names to the progress bar using the "className" option:
paceOptions = {
className: 'my-custom-class'
}
Collectors are the bits of code which gather progress information. Pace includes four default collectors:
Ajax
Monitors all ajax requests on the page
Elements
Checks for the existence of specific elements on the page
Document
Checks the document readyState
Event Lag
Checks for event loop lag signaling that javascript is being executed
They can each be configured or disabled through configuration options of the same name.
paceOptions = {
ajax: false, // disabled
document: false, // disabled
eventLag: false, // disabled
elements: {
selectors: ['.my-page']
}
};
Add your own classes to paceOptions.extraSources
to add more sources. Each source should either
have a .progress
property, or a .elements
property which is a list of objects with
.progress
properties. Pace will automatically handle all scaling to make the progress
changes look smooth to the user.
Elements being rendered to the screen is one way for us to decide that the page has been rendered. If you would like to use that source of information (not required at all), specify one or more selectors. You can comma separate the selectors to properly handle error states, where the progress bar should disappear, but the element we are looking for may never appear:
paceOptions = {
elements: {
selectors: ['.timeline, .timeline-error', '.user-profile, .profile-error']
}
}
Pace will consider the elements test successful when each selector matches something. For
this example, when either .timeline
or .timeline-error
exist, and either .user-profile
or .profile-error
exist.
Most users want the progress bar to automatically restart when a pushState event occurs (generally means ajax navigation is occuring). You can disable this:
paceOptions = {
restartOnPushState: false
}
You can also have pace restart on every ajax request which lasts longer than x ms. You'll want to disable this if you make ajax requests the user doesn't need to know about, like precaching:
paceOptions = {
restartOnRequestAfter: false
}
You can always trigger a restart manually by calling Pace.restart()
See the source for a full list of options.
Pace exposes the following methods:
Pace.start
: Show the progress bar and start updating. Called automatically if you don't use AMD or CommonJS.
Pace.restart
: Show the progress bar if it's hidden and start reporting the progress from scratch. Called automatically
whenever pushState
or replaceState
is called by default.
Pace.stop
: Hide the progress bar and stop updating it.
Pace.track
: Explicitly track one or more requests, see Tracking below
Pace.ignore
: Explicitly ignore one or more requests, see Tracking below
Pace fires the following events:
start
: When pace is initially started, or as a part of a restartstop
: When pace is manually stopped, or as a part of a restartrestart
: When pace is restarted (manually, or by a new AJAX request)done
: When pace is finishedhide
: When the pace is hidden (can be later than done
, based on ghostTime
and minTime
)You can bind onto events using the on
, off
and once
methods:
Pace.on(event, handler, [context])
: Call handler
(optionally with context) when event
is triggeredPace.off(event, [handler])
: Unbind the provided event
and handler
combination.Pace.once(event, handler, [context])
: Bind handler
to the next (and only the next) incidence of event
By default, Pace will show any ajax requests which begin as a part of a normal or ajax-y page load, or which last longer than 500ms.
You can disable all ajax tracking by setting ajax
to false:
Pace.options = {
ajax: false
}
You can disable ajax tracking except on page navigation by setting restartOnRequestAfter
to false:
Pace.options = {
restartOnRequestAfter: false
}
You can manually disable tracking for a specific request or requests by triggering them within a Pace.ignore
callback:
Pace.ignore(function() {
$.ajax(...)
});
You can force the progress bar to be shown for a specific request by triggering them within a Pace.track
callback:
Pace.track(function() {
$.ajax(...)
});
You can also ignore URLs based on a pattern:
Pace.options = {
ajax: {
ignoreURLs: ['some-substring', /some-regexp/]
}
}
None!
Pace is designed to support IE8+ (standards mode), FF 3.5+, Chrome, Safari 4+, Opera 10.5+, and all modern mobile browsers. If you run into a compatibility issue, or can make a case for supporting something else, please create an issue.
pace.js is 4kb minified and gzipped. The themes vary between 0.5 and 4kb.
We have obviously not tested this on every website. If you run into an issue, or find a way the automatic detection could be better, please create an Issue. If you can include a test case, that's even better.
Javascript by Zack Bloom CSS by Adam Schwartz
Themes inspired by Mary Lou
Project inspired by nprogress