npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

qwik-content-loader

v0.0.4

Published

SVG-Powered component to easily create placeholder loadings (like Facebook cards loading)

Downloads

508

Readme

Qwik-Content-Loader

Ported from React-Content-Loader

SVG-Powered component to easily create placeholder loadings (like Facebook's cards loading).

Features

  • :gear: Customizable: Feel free to change the colors, speed, sizes, and even RTL;
  • :ok_hand: Plug and play: with many presets to use, see the examples;
  • :pencil2: DIY: use the create-content-loader to create your own custom loaders easily;
  • ⚛️ Really lightweight: no runtime! 0 dependencies;

Index

Getting Started

pnpm i qwik-content-loader
npm i qwik-content-loader --save
yarn add qwik-content-loader

CDN from JSDELIVR

Usage

There are two ways to use it:

1. Presets, see the examples:

import { ContentLoader, ContentLoaderFacebook } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyLoader = () => <ContentLoader> <!-- Your custom shapes! --> </ContentLoader>
const MyFacebookLoader = () => <ContentLoaderFacebook />

2. Custom mode, see the online tool

const MyLoader = () => (
  <ContentLoader viewBox="0 0 380 70">
    {/* Only SVG shapes */}    
    <rect x="0" y="0" rx="5" ry="5" width="70" height="70" />
    <rect x="80" y="17" rx="4" ry="4" width="300" height="13" />
    <rect x="80" y="40" rx="3" ry="3" width="250" height="10" />
  </ContentLoader>
)

(React version Demo:) Still not clear? Take a look at this working example at codesandbox.io Or try the components editable demo hands-on and install it from bit.dev

Options

| Prop name and type | Description | |------------------------------------------------------------------| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | animate?: boolean Defaults to true | Opt-out of animations with false | | title?: string Defaults to Loading... | It's used to describe what element it is. Use '' (empty string) to remove. | | baseUrl?: string Defaults to an empty string | Required if you're using <base url="/" /> document <head/>. This prop is common used as: <ContentLoader baseUrl={window.location.pathname} /> which will fill the SVG attribute with the relative path. Related #93. | | speed?: number Defaults to 1.2 | Animation speed in seconds. | | interval?: number Defaults to 0.25 | Interval of time between runs of the animation, as a fraction of the animation speed. | | viewBox?: string Defaults to undefined | Use viewBox props to set a custom viewBox value, for more information about how to use it, read the article How to Scale SVG. | | gradientRatio?: number Defaults to 1.2 | Width of the animated gradient as a fraction of the view box width. | | gradientDirection?: string Defaults to left-right | Direction in which the gradient is animated. Useful to implement top-down animations | | rtl?: boolean Defaults to false | Content right-to-left. | | backgroundColor?: string Defaults to #f5f6f7 | Used as background of animation. | | foregroundColor?: string Defaults to #eee | Used as the foreground of animation. | | backgroundOpacity?: number Defaults to 1 | Background opacity (0 = transparent, 1 = opaque)used to solve an issue in Safari | | foregroundOpacity?: number Defaults to 1 | Animation opacity (0 = transparent, 1 = opaque)used to solve an issue in Safari | | style?: CSSProperties Defaults to {} | | | uniqueKey?: string Defaults to random unique id | Use the same value of prop key, that will solve inconsistency on the SSR, see more here. | | beforeMask?: JSX.Element Defaults to null | Define custom shapes before content, see more here. | | animateBegin?: string Defaults to undefined | Delay before the animation begins, identical to the SVG animate element begin attribute

See all options live

Examples

Facebook Style
import { ContentLoaderFacebook } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyFacebookLoader = () => <ContentLoaderFacebook />
Instagram Style
import { ContentLoaderInstagram } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyInstagramLoader = () => <ContentLoaderInstagram />
Code Style
import { ContentLoaderCode } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyCodeLoader = () => <ContentLoaderCode />
List Style
import { ContentLoaderList } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyListLoader = () => <ContentLoaderList />
Bullet list Style
import { ContentLoaderBulletList } from 'qwik-content-loader'

const MyBulletListLoader = () => <ContentLoaderBulletList />

Custom Style

For the custom mode, use the online tool.

const MyLoader = () => (
  <ContentLoader
    height={140}
    speed={1}
    backgroundColor={'#333'}
    foregroundColor={'#999'}
    viewBox="0 0 380 70"
  >
    {/* Only SVG shapes */}
    <rect x="0" y="0" rx="5" ry="5" width="70" height="70" />
    <rect x="80" y="17" rx="4" ry="4" width="300" height="13" />
    <rect x="80" y="40" rx="3" ry="3" width="250" height="10" />
  </ContentLoader>
)

Custom

Troubleshooting

Responsive - Mobile version

In order to avoid unexpected behavior, the package doesn't have opinioned settings. So if it needs to be responsive, have in mind that the output of the package is a regular SVG, so it just needs the same attributes to become a regular SVG responsive, which means:

import { Code } from 'react-content-loader'

const MyCodeLoader = () => (
  <Code
    width={100}
    height={100}
    viewBox="0 0 100 100"
    style={{ width: '100%' }}
  />
)

Alpha is not working: Safari / iOS

When using rgba as a backgroundColor or foregroundColor value, Safari does not respect the alpha channel, meaning that the color will be opaque. To prevent this, instead of using a rgba value for backgroundColor/foregroundColor, use the rgb equivalent and move the alpha channel value to the backgroundOpacity/foregroundOpacity props.

{/* Opaque color in Safari and iOS */}
<ContentLoader
  backgroundColor="rgba(0,0,0,0.06)"
  foregroundColor="rgba(0,0,0,0.12)">


{/_ Semi-transparent color in Safari and iOS _/}
<ContentLoader
    backgroundColor="rgb(0,0,0)"
    foregroundColor="rgb(0,0,0)"
    backgroundOpacity={0.06}
    foregroundOpacity={0.12}>

Black box in Safari / iOS (again)

Using the base tag on a page that contains SVG elements fails to render and it looks like a black box. Just remove the base-href tag from the <head /> and the issue has been solved.

See: #93 / 109

Browser supports SVG-Animate

Old browsers don't support animation in SVG (compatibility list), and if your project must support IE, for examples, here's a couple of ways to make sure that browser supports SVG Animate:

  • window.SVGAnimateElement
  • document.implementation.hasFeature("http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/feature#SVG-Animation", "1.1")
  • Or even use https://modernizr.com/

Similar packages


Development

Fork the repo and then clone it

$ git clone [email protected]:YourUsername/qwik-content-loader.git && cd qwik-content-loader

$ pnpm i: Install the dependencies;

$ pnpm run build: Build to production;

$ pnpm run dev: Run the Qwik Dev Server to see your changes;

Commit messages

Commit messages should follow the commit message convention so, changelogs could be generated automatically by that. Commit messages are validated automatically upon commit. If you aren't familiar with the commit message convention, you can use yarn commit (or pnpm run commit) instead of git commit, which provides an interactive CLI for generating proper commit messages.

License

MIT