Photosphere Viewer for React.JS
npm install @photo-sphere-viewer/core react-photo-sphere-viewer
[!IMPORTANT] Since v5.0.0-psv5.7.1, to use
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer />
you have to manually install the JS library@photo-sphere-viewer/core
. This is a breaking change. The library is not included in the package anymore. You can install it using the commandnpm install @photo-sphere-viewer/core
oryarn add @photo-sphere-viewer/core
. I decided to remove the library from the package to reduce the size of the package and to avoid the need to update the package every time the original library is updated. In particular, from now on, to use a plugin or an adapter, you need to import it directly from the package. For example, to use theMarkersPlugin
you need to import it from the packageimport { MarkersPlugin } from '@photo-sphere-viewer/markers-plugin'
.
Original Wrapped Library: PhotoSphereViewer used as Peer Dependency - Minimum Version: 5.7.1 [NEW]
This is a simple React component that allows you to display a 360° photo sphere. It is based on PhotoSphereViewer by Mistic100. This component is a well managed wrapper around the original JS library. It is easy to use and has a lot of features. It is also easy to customize. It is also easy to extend. Addictional features are:
import "./App.css";
import { ReactPhotoSphereViewer } from "react-photo-sphere-viewer";
import React from "react";
function App() {
return (
<div className="App">
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_Pano.jpg"
height={"100vh"}
width={"100%"}
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
[!IMPORTANT] To use
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer />
in Next.js with Page Router, you'll need to use some work-arounds in order to import correctly the CSS modules. Otherwise you will encounter theCSS Modules cannot be imported from within node_modules
error. See more here.
I've added this custom effect that allows you to display the panorama like a little planet. To enable it, you need to pass the littlePlanet
prop to the component.
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_Pano.jpg"
littlePlanet={true}
height={"100vh"}
width={"100%"}
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>
The effect is this:
type standardProps = {
src: string; // The URL of the panorama image.
height: number;
width?: number;
containerClass?: string; // The class name of the div that wrap the component.
littlePlanet?: boolean; // Display the panorama like a little planet.
hideNavbarButton?: boolean; // Hide the navbar button.
};
Currently all options of the original library are supported and exported as props.
/**
* Viewer configuration
* @link https://photo-sphere-viewer.js.org/guide/config.html
*/
type ViewerConfig = {
container: HTMLElement | string;
panorama?: any;
/** @deprecated Use the `overlay` plugin instead */
overlay?: any;
/** @deprecated Use the `overlay` plugin instead */
overlayOpacity?: number;
/** @default equirectangular */
adapter?: AdapterConstructor | [AdapterConstructor, any];
plugins?: Array<PluginConstructor | [PluginConstructor, any]>;
/** @default null */
caption?: string;
/** @default null */
description?: string;
/** @default null */
downloadUrl?: string;
/** @default null */
downloadName?: string;
/** @default null */
loadingImg?: string;
/** @default 'Loading...' */
loadingTxt?: string;
/** @default `container` size */
size?: CssSize;
/** @default false */
fisheye?: boolean | number;
/** @default 30 */
minFov?: number;
/** @default 90 */
maxFov?: number;
/** @default 50 */
defaultZoomLvl?: number;
/** @default 0 */
defaultYaw?: number | string;
/** @default 0 */
defaultPitch?: number | string;
/** @default `0,0,0` */
sphereCorrection?: SphereCorrection;
/** @default 1 */
moveSpeed?: number;
/** @default 1 */
zoomSpeed?: number;
/** @default true */
moveInertia?: boolean;
/** @default true */
mousewheel?: boolean;
/** @default true */
mousemove?: boolean;
/** @default false */
mousewheelCtrlKey?: boolean;
/** @default false */
touchmoveTwoFingers?: boolean;
/** @deprecated configure `useXmpData` on EquirectangularAdapter */
useXmpData?: boolean;
panoData?: PanoData | PanoDataProvider;
requestHeaders?:
| Record<string, string>
| ((url: string) => Record<string, string>);
/** @deprecated configure `backgroundColor` on EquirectangularAdapter */
canvasBackground?: string;
/** @default '{ alpha: true, antialias: true }' */
rendererParameters?: WebGLRendererParameters;
/** @default false */
withCredentials?: boolean;
/** @default 'zoom move download description caption fullscreen' */
navbar?: boolean | string | Array<string | NavbarCustomButton>;
lang?: {
zoom: string;
zoomOut: string;
zoomIn: string;
moveUp: string;
moveDown: string;
moveLeft: string;
moveRight: string;
download: string;
fullscreen: string;
menu: string;
close: string;
twoFingers: string;
ctrlZoom: string;
loadError: string;
littlePlanetButton: string;
littlePlanetIcon: string;
[K: string]: string;
};
keyboard?:
| boolean
| "always"
| "fullscreen"
| Record<string, ACTIONS | ((viewer: Viewer) => void)>;
keyboardActions?: Record<string, ACTIONS | ((viewer: Viewer) => void)>;
};
This code is generated from the original library. Click here to see documentation.
To use the standard plugins provided by the original library, you need to pass the plugins
prop to the component. The prop is an array of plugins. Each plugin can be a constructor or an array of constructor and options. To include them in the component, you need to import them directly from the "@photo-sphere-viewer/" package.
The only "third-party" plugin that is supported at the moment is the "Lensflare" plugin. To use it, you need to import it from the "photo-sphere-viewer-lensflare-plugin" package. This plugin is made by me and it is not included in the original library.
import { ReactPhotoSphereViewer } from "react-photo-sphere-viewer";
import { LensflarePlugin } from "photo-sphere-viewer-lensflare-plugin";
import { CompassPlugin } from "@photo-sphere-viewer/compass-plugin";
import { MarkersPlugin } from "@photo-sphere-viewer/markers-plugin";
function App() {
const plugins = [
[
LensflarePlugin,
{
// list of lensflares
lensflares: [
{
id: "sun",
position: { yaw: "145deg", pitch: "2deg" },
type: 0,
},
],
},
],
[
CompassPlugin,
{
hotspots: [
{ yaw: "0deg" },
{ yaw: "90deg" },
{ yaw: "180deg" },
{ yaw: "270deg" },
],
},
],
[
MarkersPlugin,
{
markers: [
{
id: "polygon",
polygonPx: [
2941, 1413, 3042, 1402, 3222, 1419, 3433, 1463, 3480, 1505, 3438,
1538, 3241, 1543, 3041, 1555, 2854, 1559, 2739, 1516, 2775, 1469,
2941, 1413,
],
svgStyle: {
fill: "rgba(255,0,0,0.2)",
stroke: "rgba(255, 0, 50, 0.8)",
strokeWidth: "2px",
},
data: { compass: "rgba(255, 0, 50, 0.8)" },
},
{
id: "polyline",
polylinePx: [
2478, 1635, 2184, 1747, 1674, 1953, 1166, 1852, 709, 1669, 301,
1519, 94, 1399, 34, 1356,
],
svgStyle: {
stroke: "rgba(80, 150, 50, 0.8)",
strokeLinecap: "round",
strokeLinejoin: "round",
strokeWidth: "20px",
},
data: { compass: "rgba(80, 150, 50, 0.8)" },
},
],
},
],
];
return (
<div className="App">
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_pano.jpg"
plugins={plugins}
height={"100vh"}
width={"100%"}
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>
</div>
);
}
To handle events from outside the component, you need to declare the callback function in the onReady(instance: Viewer)
prop. The instance
is the instance of the viewer. You can call the plugin methods using the instance.getPlugin()
method. The instance.getPlugin()
method returns the plugin instance. You can call the plugin methods using the plugin instance.
const handleReady = (instance) => {
const markersPlugs = instance.getPlugin(MarkersPlugin);
if (!markersPlugs) return;
markersPlugs.addMarker({
id: "imageLayer2",
image: "drone.png",
size: { width: 220, height: 220 },
position: { yaw: "130.5deg", pitch: "-0.1deg" },
tooltip: "Image embedded in the scene",
});
markersPlugs.addEventListener("select-marker", () => {
console.log("asd");
});
};
return (
<div className="App">
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_pano.jpg"
plugins={plugins}
height={"100vh"}
width={"100%"}
onReady={handleReady}
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>
</div>
);
Click here to see plugins documentation.
Please follow this Sandbox template to see how to use the original plugin: Sandbox
Please remember to set the 'src' prop of the ReactPhotoSphereViewer component to a placeholder image, it colud be for example the first picture of the virtual tour. #36
To use the standard library adapters provided by the original library, you need to pass the adapter
prop to the component. The prop is an array of adapters. Each adapter can be a constructor or an array of constructor and options. To include them in the component, you need to import them directly from the "react-photo-sphere-viewer" package.
import {
CubemapAdapter,
CubemapAdapterOptions,
} from "@photo-sphere-viewer/cubemap-adapter";
Click here to see adapters documentation.
All documented events are exported as props (function names).
type ViewerEvents = {
onPositionChange?(lat: number, lng: number, instance: Viewer): any;
onZoomChange?(
data: events.ZoomUpdatedEvent & { type: "zoom-updated" },
instance: Viewer
): any;
onClick?(data: events.ClickEvent & { type: "click" }, instance: Viewer): void;
onDblclick?(
data: events.ClickEvent & { type: "dblclick" },
instance: Viewer
): void;
onReady?(instance: Viewer): void;
};
You can declare an event callback:
const handleClick = (data: events.ClickEvent & { type: "click" }) => {
console.log(data);
};
and then:
{
/*Pass the callback to the component*/
}
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
ref={photoSphereRef}
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_Pano.jpg"
onClick={handleClick}
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>;
To see the original events, click here.
To trigger a method you need to pass a reference to the component and access the method directly.
// Create a reference to the component
const photoSphereRef = React.createRef<ReactPhotoSphereViewer>();
// And calling the method
photoSphereRef.current.zoom(10);
// Or to be sure that the component is mounted
React.useEffect(() => {
if (!photoSphereRef.current)
return;
photoSphereRef.current.animate({
yaw: 0,
pitch: 0,
zoom: 55,
speed: '10rpm',
}); // Or any other method
}, [photoSphereRef]);
And then:
{
/*Pass the ref to the component*/
}
<ReactPhotoSphereViewer
ref={photoSphereRef}
src="https://github.com/Elius94/react-photo-sphere-viewer/raw/main/Test_Pano.jpg"
></ReactPhotoSphereViewer>;
Currently managed methods are:
To see the original methods, click here.
MIT © elius94