soixantecircuits / idle-vue

Vue component wrapper for idle-js
MIT License
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idle-vue Build Status

idle-vue is a Vue.js plug-in, that detects when the user hasn't interacted with your app for a while. idle-vue is meant to be used with Vue, Vuex and either Webpack or Browserify.

idle-vue is based on idle-js.

:earth_africa: Installation

npm install --save idle-vue

:wave: Usage

At the root of your project, just before creating your Vue application, import the idle-vue plug-in, and add it to the Vue global with the following code:

import Vue from 'vue'
import IdleVue from 'idle-vue'

const options = { ... }

Vue.use(IdleVue, options)

Vue.use is a Vue method that installs the given plugin (here, IdleVue), and passes it the given options.

The above code does two things:

Hooks

The plug-in adds two hooks to Vue: onIdle and onActive; those functions may be defined in any Vue object (components included), and will be called by the plug-in when the window respectively starts and stops idling.

These hooks are not methods; they should be added directly at the Root of your component. These hooks will not be called if the options object has no eventEmitter field.

Example - main.js

import Vue from 'vue'
import IdleVue from 'idle-vue'

const eventsHub = new Vue()

Vue.use(IdleVue, {
  eventEmitter: eventsHub,
  idleTime: 10000
})

const vm = new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  data () {
    return {
      messageStr: 'Hello'
    }
  },
  onIdle() {
    this.messageStr = 'ZZZ'
  },
  onActive() {
    this.messageStr = 'Hello'
  }
})

Example - index.html

<div id=app>
  <p>
    {{ messageStr }}
  </p>
</div>

isAppIdle

The plug-in adds a computed value isAppIdle to every Vue object.

It's a shorthand for the current value of store.state.idleVue.isIdle; this value will always be undefined if the options object has no store field.

Note that using isAppIdle or using the hooks onIdle and onActive are both different, valid ways of doing the same thing: detecting when your app is idle. You can use either or both of them depending on your needs.

Example - main.js

import Vue from 'vue'
import IdleVue from 'idle-vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'

const store = new Vuex.Store({
  // ...
})

Vue.use(IdleVue, { store })

const vm = new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  store,
  computed: {
    messageStr() {
      return this.isAppIdle ? 'ZZZ' : 'Hello'
    }
  }
})

Example - index.html

<div id=app>
  <p>
    {{ messageStr }}
  </p>
</div>

IdleView

The package comes with an example component named IdleView (or idle-view).

idle-view is not automatically included with the plugin. It can be imported as a global component or a dependency within your own component, however it serves best as a working example from which to base your own implementation.

This component is a default idle overlay with a small "touch the screen" sprite; it has no props and no slots. You may create your own idle overlay by exploiting isAppIdle.

Example - main.js

import IdleVue from 'idle-vue'
import IdleVueComponent from 'idle-vue/src/components/Idle.vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'

const eventsHub = new Vue()
const store = new Vuex.Store({
  // ...
})

Vue.use(IdleVue, { eventEmitter: eventsHub, store })
Vue.component('idle-view', IdleVueComponent) // Required only to use idle-view component

const vm = new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  store,
  // ...
})

Example - index.html

<div id=app>
  <p>
    Hello world!
    ...
  </p>
  <idle-view />
</div>

Options

idle-vue accepts the following options when loaded; all of them are facultative, except store or eventEmitter; they cannot be both omitted:

:heart: Contribute

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