Tutorial

Progressive Image Loading in Vue.js

Published on April 19, 2017
Default avatar

By Joshua Bemenderfer

Progressive Image Loading in Vue.js

While we believe that this content benefits our community, we have not yet thoroughly reviewed it. If you have any suggestions for improvements, please let us know by clicking the “report an issue“ button at the bottom of the tutorial.

If you’ve spent any time on Medium (and I know you have, you’re a developer,) you’ve probably at least noticed their image loading technique. First a very low-resolution image is loaded, and is then displayed to the client highly blurred as a placeholder. Once the full-resolution image loads, the placeholder fades out to reveal it. The resulting transition is very smooth and easy on the eyes.

(If you’re interested in learning more about this technique and alternatives, take a look at this post by José M. Pérez.)

Turns out, of course, that there’s a plugin for Vue (by @ccforward) that implements this effect.

Installation

Install progressive-image in your Vue.js project with Yarn or NPM:

# Yarn
$ yarn add progressive-image
# NPM
$ npm install progressive-image --save

You’ll need to import the CSS in your page first. Use whatever method you’d like. (The most basic method being a direct import.)

<link href="./node_modules/progressive-image/dist/index.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">

Now, in your app’s main file, enable the ProgressiveImage plugin.

main.js
import Vue from 'vue';
import ProgressiveImage from 'progressive-image/dist/vue'
import App from 'App.vue';

Vue.use(ProgressiveImage, {
  removePreview: true
});

new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  render: h => h(App)
});

Usage

From there, it’s a cinch to add a preview to your component. Assuming you have a full-size and low-resolution image already prepared,

<template>
  <div class="my-component">
    <!-- Render a progressive image -->
    <div class="progressive">
      <img class="preview" v-progressive="'./example.png'" src="./example-preview.png"/>
    </div>

  </div>
</template>

Bindings are fully supported, so it’s also a cinch to render images from an array or data set.

Bonus: srcset support.

As an added bonus, progressive-image supports srcset usage for responsive images. (If you’re not familiar with what that is, here’s a great article on the subject.)

You can use it directly through a data attribute or a binding.

<template>
  <div class="my-component">
    <!-- Render a progressive image -->
    <div class="progressive">
      <img class="preview" v-progressive="'./example.png'" src="./example-preview.png" data-srcset="./example.jpg 1x, ./example@2x.jpg 2x"/>
    </div>

  </div>
</template>

Have fun with super simple, great looking responsive images!

Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.

Learn more about us


About the authors
Default avatar
Joshua Bemenderfer

author

Still looking for an answer?

Ask a questionSearch for more help

Was this helpful?
 
Leave a comment


This textbox defaults to using Markdown to format your answer.

You can type !ref in this text area to quickly search our full set of tutorials, documentation & marketplace offerings and insert the link!

Try DigitalOcean for free

Click below to sign up and get $200 of credit to try our products over 60 days!

Sign up

Join the Tech Talk
Success! Thank you! Please check your email for further details.

Please complete your information!

Get our biweekly newsletter

Sign up for Infrastructure as a Newsletter.

Hollie's Hub for Good

Working on improving health and education, reducing inequality, and spurring economic growth? We'd like to help.

Become a contributor

Get paid to write technical tutorials and select a tech-focused charity to receive a matching donation.

Welcome to the developer cloud

DigitalOcean makes it simple to launch in the cloud and scale up as you grow — whether you're running one virtual machine or ten thousand.

Learn more
DigitalOcean Cloud Control Panel