Use in combination with appropriate-images.
After you've generated resized, optimized images with appropriate-images, you'll want to use them in the browser.
If you like React, you'll want to use them with React.
You'll need to determine which variant of the image to load — that is, which size, and whether to load the .webp version or not.
This module does that.
Here are the steps it takes.
- Measures the element's available width with react-simple-surveyor;
- Combines that width with your appropriate-images configuration to get a URL, using appropriate-images-get-url;
- Then renders the appropriate variant of the image.
(If you aren't using React but want to use your appropriate-images in the browser, check out appropriate-images-get-url).
scopeAppropriateImage(imageConfig, [options])
A named import for ES2015 modules, or a property on the CommonJS module.
import { scopeAppropriateImage } from '@mapbox/appropriate-images-react';
// OR
const scopeAppropriateImage = require('@mapbox/appropriate-images-react').scopeAppropriateImage;Returns an AppropriateImage component scoped according to your appropriate-images configuration and options.
Type Object.
Required.
Your appropriate-images configuration. Use the same configuration at run time, in the browser, as you do at build time, when generating the resized, optimized images.
Type: (originalUrl: string) => string.
Default: x => x.
If you want to transform the URL in some way, use this function.
One use-case is to take advantage of Webpack's augmented require() to get the URL that Webpack creates — if, for example, you're adding a hash to the end of files loaded with Webpack's file-loader.
For example:
import { scopeAppropriateImage } from '@mapbox/appropriate-images-react';
const AppropriateImage = scopeAppropriateImage(myImageConfig, {
transformUrl: url => require(`/my/image/directory/${url}`)
});Type: number.
Default: 1.3.
See the same option for appropriate-images-get-url.
This is the component that is returned by scopeAppropriateImage.
It can render your image in two ways:
- As an
<img>. Usually you'll do this. - As the background image of an absolutely positioned
<div>. This can be handy in situations when you want to take advantage of powerful CSS background properties likebackground-sizeandbackground-position.
All props you pass other than those documented below are applied directly to the rendered element (e.g. alt, id, data-*, aria-*).
Type string.
Required.
The id of the image to render. Must correspond with a key in the appropriate-images configuration.
Type boolean.
Default: false.
By default, an <img> element is rendered.
If this option is true, you instead get a <div>, absolutely positioned to fill its container, whose background-image will be the appropriate image.
Type string.
Default: 'center center'.
Only meaningful if background={true}.
Any background-position value will do.
Type string.
Default: 'cover'.
Only meaningful if background={true}.
Any background-size value will do.
const React = require('react');
const { scopeAppropriateImage } = require('@mapbox/appropriate-images-react');
const imageConfig = require('./path/to/my/image-config.js');
const AppropriateImage = scopeAppropriateImage(imageConfig);
class MyPage extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<div>
<p>An appropriate image will be loaded below:</p>
<AppropriateImage imageId="bear" style={{ maxWidth: '100%' }}/>
</div>
);
}
}