A minimal customizable performance-stable Angular component for rendering After Effects animations.
Table of contents
Features
- rich:
ngx-lottie
provides more opportunities to work with API exposed by Lottie - strict: all types of objects and events are available to you
- performant: the
lottie
library is loaded on demand
Quick example
<ng-lottie
width="600"
height="500"
containerClass="moving-box"
[options]="options"
(animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"
(configReady)="configReady()"
(dataReady)="dataReady()"
(domLoaded)="domLoaded()"
(enterFrame)="enterFrame($event)"
(segmentStart)="segmentStart($event)"
(complete)="complete($event)"
(loopComplete)="loopComplete($event)"
(destroy)="destroy($event)"
></ng-lottie>
Installation
To install ngx-lottie
run the following command:
npm i lottie-web ngx-lottie
# or if you're using yarn
yarn add lottie-web ngx-lottie
Usage
First, import the LottieModule
to any of your modules:
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieModule } from 'ngx-lottie';
@NgModule({
imports: [
LottieModule
]
})
export class AppModule {}
Now you can simple use an ng-lottie
component and provide your custom options via the options
binding:
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieOptions, AnimationItem } from 'ngx-lottie';
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: `
<ng-lottie
[options]="options"
(animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"
></ng-lottie>
`
})
export class AppComponent {
public options: LottieOptions = {
path: '/assets/animation.json'
};
public animationCreated(animationItem: AnimationItem): void {
console.log(animationItem);
}
}
Also it's possible to use a lottie
directive if you'd like to provide your own custom container and play with it:
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieOptions, AnimationItem } from 'ngx-lottie';
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: `
<main
lottie
[options]="options"
(animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"
></main>
`
})
export class AppComponent {
public options: LottieOptions = {
path: '/assets/animation.json'
};
public animationCreated(animationItem: AnimationItem): void {
console.log(animationItem);
}
}
API
Bindings
@Input() | Type | Required | Default | Description |
---|
options | LottieOptions | required | { renderer: 'svg', loop: true, autoplay: true } | Configuration that's used by AnimationItem |
width | string | optional | null | Custom container width |
height | string | optional | null | Custom container height |
styles | LottieCSSStyleDeclaration | optional | null | Custom container styles |
containerClass | LottieContainerClass | optional | null | Custom class applied to the container |
Events
@Output() | Type | Required | Description |
---|
animationCreated | AnimationItem | optional | Dispatched after the lottie successfully creates animation |
configReady | void | optional | Dispatched after the needed renderer is configured |
dataReady | void | optional | Dispatched when all parts of the animation have been loaded |
dataFailed | void | optional | Dispatched if the XMLHttpRequest , that tried to load animation data using provided path , has errored |
domLoaded | void | optional | Dispatched when elements have been added to the DOM |
enterFrame | BMEnterFrameEvent | optional | Dispatched after entering the new frame |
segmentStart | BMSegmentStartEvent | optional | Dispatched when the new segment is adjusted |
loopComplete | BMCompleteLoopEvent | optional | Dispatched after completing frame loop |
complete | BMCompleteEvent | optional | Dispatched after completing the last frame |
loadedImages | void | optional | Dispatched after all assets are preloaded |
destroy | BMDestroyEvent | optional | Dispatched in the ngOnDestroy hook of the service that manages lottie 's events, it's useful for releasing resources |
Optimizations
The ng-lottie
component is marked with OnPush
change detection strategy. This means it will not be checked in any phase of the change detection mechanism until you change the reference to some binding. For example if you use an svg
renderer and there are a lot DOM elements projected - you would like to avoid checking this component, as it's not necessary.
Also, events, dispatched by AnimationItem
, are listened outside Angular's zone, thus you shouldn't worry that every dispatch will be intercepted by Angular's zone.