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accessible-image-lazy-load

v1.3.3

Published

gandul : Accessible Lazy Loading Images

Downloads

335

Readme

gandul! 😴 (accessible-image-lazy-load)

MIT license NPM Version File Size Twitter


Accessible lazy loading images

gandul 😴 is a lightweight (<2Kb) non-dependant javascript module that adds a different approach on lazy loading focusing on accessibility. Most existing options work by either making you drop the src attribute of the image or, making you create a base64 data / low resolution blurred alternative version of the image, or also including the img element into a <noscript> tag. This could be hacky and verbose and the main issue with it is that alters the semantics of the original element.

In order to avoid that, gandul 😴 works by taking a common anchor hyperlink <a> as the data source of the image to be loaded and transforms it into a <img> element. This way you don't lose the reference to the image you want to show and, in case there's no JavaScript, your image will still be accessible by users and crawlers.

Basic Example :

<!-- How your HTML will look like: -->
<a href="http://picsum.photos/320/180" class="gandul">Nice kitten</a>

<!-- What the gandul script will output : -->
<img src="http://picsum.photos/320/180" class="gandul" alt="Nice kitten" />

How to use it

1. Download the script

You have multiple options to get gandul 😴 ( gandul.min.js ):

2. Get it working

Write an anchor hyperlink with the reference to your image and set the class gandul on it (<a class="gandul">). then, include and call the script :

<!-- How a gandul image reference looks like -->
<a href="http://picsum.photos/200/200" class="gandul">Nice kitten</a>

<!-- Include and call the script -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/accessible-image-lazy-load"></script>
<script>gandul();</script>

Image Attributes

gandul 😴 will take all the existing attributes on the <a> element and they will be passed to the newly created <img> with a few peculiarities, as <a> elements don't have srcset, sizes, width... attributes, those will be passed as data attributes. Right below you can see the equivalences table and some examples:

In case you want to apply gandul to a different HTML element than a hyperlink (<a>) the image source will be taken from the data-href attribute

| <a> attributes | <img> attributes equivalence | |-----------------------|-------------| | Anchor hyperlink inner text. | alt | | href | src | | data-href | src | | data-srcset | srcset | | data-sizes | sizes | | data-width | width |

Fully responsive image example:

<!-- Write your hyperlink HTML as it follows : -->
<a href="http://picsum.photos/800/400"
   data-srcset="http://picsum.photos/320/160 320w,
             http://picsum.photos/480/240 480w,
             http://picsum.photos/800/400 800w"
   data-sizes="(max-width: 320px) 280px, (max-width: 480px) 440px, 800px"
   class="gandul">Nice kitten</a>

<!-- To get a responsive image output like this one: -->
<img src="http://picsum.photos/800/400"
	 srcset="http://picsum.photos/320/160 320w,
             http://picsum.photos/480/240 480w,
             http://picsum.photos/800/400 800w"
     sizes="(max-width: 320px) 280px, (max-width: 480px) 440px, 800px"
     class="gandul"
     alt="Nice kitten" />

Setting just the width attribute of an image :

<!-- What you'll write: -->
<a href="http://picsum.photos/800/400" data-width="800" class="gandul">Nice kitten</a>

<!-- What you'll get : -->
<img src="http://picsum.photos/800/400" width="800" alt="Nice kitten" />

Any other attributes :

Any other attributes will remain as they are, which means that if you already set or you need on the <img> an id or different classes, those will be passed through the gandul 😴 script :

<!-- input -->
<a href="http://picsum.photos/800/400" id="cat" class="nice kitten gandul">Nice kitten</a>

<!-- gandul output -->
<img src="http://picsum.photos/800/400" id="cat" class="nice kitten gandul" alt="Nice kitten" />

Options

Some parameters can be send to the gandul 😴 function:

gandul(target, opts, action);
  • target (@string) : a selector targeting all the elements where you want the script to get executed. It defaults to all anchor hyperlinks with the classname gandul : "a.gandul"
  • opts (@object) : an options object containing the fields used by the IntersectionObserver constructor
    • root : element used as viewport of the target. Default value is the brwoser viewport (null)
    • rootMargin : margin of root element to grow or shrink the intersection. Default value takes an extra 50 pixels above and below the viewport ("50px 0px 50px 0px").
    • threshold : percentage of target visibility to trigger the action. Default is 0.
  • action (@function) : A callback function to be executed when the image finishes loading after the target has intersected the given viewport, it comes with image element itself as first parameter (function(img){ /* console.log(img) */ }). The default action when image loads is to attach to the img element the class named 'gandul-active'.

The following example makes use of some of these options, it will target all hyperlinks with the class gandul-hyperlink, will be activated when 50% of the target element is visible and the function used as callback will change the created image border style as defined below:

gandul('a.gandul-hyperlink', { threshold: .5 }, function(img) {
    img.style.border = 'solid red 10px';
});

Development

# Clone the repo
$ git clone https://github.com/alterebro/accessible-image-lazy-load.git
$ cd accessible-image-lazy-load/

# Install dependencies
$ npm install

# Build (any of the below will do it)
$ npm run build
$ gulp

Gandul. Accessible Image Lazy loadingJorge Moreno — @alterebro