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

vue-touch-gyro

v2.0.1

Published

Hammer.js based touch events plugin for Vue.js 2.0

Downloads

17

Readme

vue-touch

Touch events plugin for Vue.js this is a BETA Release

This is a component wrapper for Hammer.js 2.0.

Install

This plugin requires Vue >= 2.0. For the Vue 1.*-compatible version, see the 1.0 branch

npm

Available through npm as vue-touch. As this version is currently in BETA, you have to install with the next tag.

npm install vue-touch@next
var VueTouch = require('vue-touch')
Vue.use(VueTouch, {name: 'v-touch'})

You can pass an options object as the second argument, which at the moment accepts one property, name. It's used to define the name of the component that is registered with Vue and defaults to 'v-touch'.

Direct include

You can also directly include it with a <script> tag when you have Vue and Hammer.js already included globally. It will automatically install itself, and will add a global VueTouch.

Usage

Using the <v-touch> component

<!-- Renders a div element by default -->
<v-touch v-on:swipeleft="onSwipeLeft">Swipe me!</v-touch>

<!-- Render as other elements with the 'tag' prop -->
<v-touch tag="a" v-on:tap="onTap">Tap me!</v-touch>

API

Component Events

vue-touch supports all Hammer Events ot of the box, just bind a listener to the component with v-on and vue-touch will setup the Hammer Manager & Recognizer for you.

|Recognizer|Events|Example| |---|----|----| |Pan|pan, panstart, panmove, panend, pancancel, panleft, panright, panup, pandown |v-on:panstart="callback"| |Pinch|pinch, pinchstart, pinchmove,pinchend, pinchcancel, pinchin, pinchout| v-on:pinchout="callback"| |Press|press, pressup|v-on:pressup="callback"| |Rotate|rotate, rotatestart, rotatemove, rotateend, rotatecancel, |v-on:rotateend="callback"| |Swipe|swipe, swipeleft, swiperight, swipeup, swipedown|v-on:swipeleft="callback"| |Tap|tap|v-on:tap="callback"|

Component Props

Event Option Props

You can use the matching *-options props to pass Hammer options such as direction and threshold:

Example

<!-- detect only horizontal pans with a threshold of 100 -->
<v-touch
  v-on:panstart="onPanStart"
  v-bind:pan-options="{ direction: 'horizontal', threshold: 100 }">
</v-touch>

There's one prop per Recognizer available.

|Recognizer|Prop| |----------|----| |Pan|v-bind:pan-options| |Pinch|v-bind:pinch-options| |Rotate|v-bind:rotate-options| |Swipe|v-bind:swipe-options| |Tap|v-bind:tap-options|

See Hammer.js documentation for all available options for events.

About Directions:

In the above example, not that we used direction: 'horizontal'. Hammer's directions interface is a little ugly (Hammer['DIRECTION_HORIZONTAL']).

VueTouch keeps that from you and accepts simple strings as directions:

const directions = ['up', 'down', 'left', 'right', 'horizontal', 'vertical', 'all']

The 'enabled' Prop

|Prop|allowed Values| |----|--------------| |enabled| Boolean or Object (see below)|

You can enable and disable all or some of the event recognizers via the enabled prop:

Example

<v-touch
  <!-- enable all recognizers -->
  v-bind:enabled="true"

  <!-- disable all recognizers -->
  v-bind:enabled="false"

  <!-- pass an object to enable and disable recognizers individually -->
  v-bind:enabled="{ pinch: true, rotate: false }"

></v-touch>

The 'options' prop

Hammer accepts a few general options that are normally passed when creating a Hammer instance with new Hammer() or new Hammer.Manager().

In vue-touch, you can pass those options via the options prop:

|Prop|allowed Values| |----|--------------| |options| https://hammerjs.github.io/api/#hammer.defaults |

Example

<v-touch options="{ touchAction: 'pan' }" />

Public Component Methods

The component exposes a few convenience methods to enable and disable Recognizers, and check if a recognizer is enabled:

|Method|Explanation| |------|-----------| |disable(event)|disable event's recognizer| |enable(event)|disable event's recognizer| |toggle(event)|Toogle the 'enable' state of event's recognizer| |disableAll()|disable all Recognizers| |enableAll()|enable all Recognizers| |isEnabled(event)|returns true if Recognizer for event is currently enabled|

<template>
  <v-touch ref="tapper" @tap="callback"></v-touch>
</template>
<script>
  export default {
    methods: {
      disableTap() {
        this.$refs.tapper.disable('tap')
      },
      enableTap() {
        this.$refs.tapper.enable('tap')
      }
    }
  }
</script>

Plugin Methods

Global Event Options

You can define global defaults for the builtin recognizers

// change the threshold for all swipe recognizers
VueTouch.config.swipe = {
  threshold: 200
}

Registering Custom Events

You can register custom events with vue-touch.

// example registering a custom doubletap event.
// the `type` indicates the base recognizer to use from Hammer
// all other options are Hammer recognizer options.
VueTouch.registerCustomEvent('doubletap', {
  type: 'tap',
  taps: 2
})

Warning: You have to register your custom events before installing the plugin with Vue.use(VueTouch). VueTouch will log a warning to the console (in dev mode) if you try to do that afterwards, and the event will not work.

This will make it possible to listen for this event on <v-touch>. Additionally, just like for "normal" events, you can pass further options as the corresponding prop.

<v-touch v-on:doubletap="onDoubleTap"></v-touch>
<!-- with local options -->
<v-touch v-on:doubletap="onDoubleTap" v-bind:doubletap-options="{intervall: 250}"></v-touch>

See /example for a multi-event demo. To build it, run npm install && npm run build.

Server-Side Rendering (SSR)

As of the moment of this writing, requiring HammerJS in a non-browser-environment (like during the build process of your SSR bundle) throws an error (hammerjs/hammerjs#1060).

The easiest fix to that is to use a webpack alias (in your server-side(!) webpack copnfiguration) to replace the hammerjs package with a module that just exports a stub, i.e. an empty object. vue-touch comes with such a module, called hammer-ssr.js

alias: {
  'hammerjs$': 'vue-touch/dist/hammer-ssr.js'
}

Once this issue has been resolved HammerJS, this alias is no longer nessessary and can be removed.

The <v-touch> component itself will never try to setup any Hamer Manangers or Recognizers if it detects that it is running in an SSR environment (seeVue.js API docs for vm.$isServer). The component will only render a normal <div> element (or whatever element you defined with the tag prop).

Known Limitations & Bugs

  • Curently, changing -options props will not change recogizer settings. The initial values will stay in place until the component is re-created.

TODO

  • [ ] Support updating recognizer options when props change.
  • [ ] Find out if e2e tests are possible(contribution welcome)

License

MIT