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Introducing the Socket Python SDK
The initial version of the Socket Python SDK is now on PyPI, enabling developers to more easily interact with the Socket REST API in Python projects.
spotlight.js
Advanced tools
Demo • Getting Started • Gallery Groups • Options • Styling • API • Changelog
The new version includes tons of fixes, new features and improvements which was collected over the last two years. Read the Changelog to get all new features.
Spotlight runs out of the box:
Technical properties:
Get Latest Stable Build (Recommended):
Bundle: (all assets bundled into one single file: js + css + html + icons) | ||
spotlight.bundle.js | Download | https://rawcdn.githack.com/nextapps-de/spotlight/0.7.8/dist/spotlight.bundle.js |
Non-Bundled: (js and css are separated, css includes icons as base64) | ||
spotlight.min.js | Download | https://rawcdn.githack.com/nextapps-de/spotlight/0.7.8/dist/js/spotlight.min.js |
spotlight.min.css | Download | https://rawcdn.githack.com/nextapps-de/spotlight/0.7.8/dist/css/spotlight.min.css |
Sources: (not bundled at all, images as url to original resources) | ||
ES6 Modules | Download | The /src/js folder of this Github repository |
LESS Files (source) | Download | The /src/css folder of this Github repository |
spotlight.css (compiled) | Download | https://rawcdn.githack.com/nextapps-de/spotlight/0.7.8/src/css/spotlight.css |
src.zip | Download | Download all source files including image original resources. |
Get Latest (NPM):
npm install spotlight.js
Get Latest Nightly (Do not use for production!):
Just exchange the version number from the URLs above with "master", e.g.: "/spotlight/0.7.8/dist/" into "/spotlight/master/dist".
If you are using markup on anchor elements to inject the library, then it is recommended to load the lib inside your head section of the document. Because that will better prevent the original behavior of the anchor tag (e.g. when library wasn't fully loaded on page start).
The bundled version includes all assets like js, css, html and icon images as base64.
<html>
<head>
<script src="spotlight.bundle.js"></script>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>
The non-bundled version needs to load js and css separately (css also includes icons as base64).
<html>
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="spotlight.min.css">
<script src="spotlight.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>
If you are using markup on anchor elements to inject the library, then it is recommended to load the lib inside your head section of the document. Read example above.
Just add a link tag to the header sections which indicated to preload the script. Right before the body is closing add your site scripts. Depending on your code you may need to load them in the right order.
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
<link rel="preload" href="spotlight.bundle.js" as="script">
</head>
<body>
<!--
HTML CONTENT
-->
<!-- BOTTOM OF BODY -->
<script src="spotlight.bundle.js" defer></script>
<!-- YOUR SCRIPT -->
<script src="my-script.js" defer></script>
</body>
</html>
You can also load the non-bundled version in the same way.
In rare situations it might produce a short flashing/reflow after page load, depending on your stack. Moving the script tag into the head section will solve this issue. Also try to use the non-bundled version.
The ES6 modules are located in src/js/
. You need to load the stylesheet file explicitly (includes icons as base64).
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="dist/css/spotlight.min.css">
</head>
<script type="module">
import Spotlight from "./src/js/spotlight.js";
</script>
You can also load modules via CDN, e.g.:
<script type="module">
import Spotlight from "https://unpkg.com/spotlight@0.7.8/src/js/spotlight.js";
</script>
The ES6 modules are not minified. Please use your favored bundler or build tool for this purpose.
The most simple way is the combination of img tags as preview images (thumbs) wrapped in an anchor element which points to the fully sized image. The advantage of this workaround is it fully falls back to a classical behavior. It is the universal markup language which all web tools already understand. Therefore, it may have some advantages for SEO also.
Just add the class spotlight to an anchor element accordingly, e.g.:
<a class="spotlight" href="img1.jpg">
<img src="thumb1.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="img2.jpg">
<img src="thumb2.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="img3.jpg">
<img src="thumb3.jpg">
</a>
This also works with dynamically loaded content. There is no need to inject listeners on new elements. Instead, Spotlight make use of global event capturing.
Alternatively you can use non-anchor elements also:
<div class="spotlight" data-src="img1.jpg">
<!-- image or any other elements -->
</a>
Pretty much the same like anchors but uses data-src instead of href.
Grouping galleries is useful when you have multiple images on your page which should be separated into groups, instead of adding all images to one single gallery when opened.
Give one of the outer wrapping element the class spotlight-group, e.g.:
<!-- Group 1 -->
<div class="spotlight-group">
<a class="spotlight" href="dog1.jpg">
<img src="dog1-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="dog2.jpg">
<img src="dog2-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="dog3.jpg">
<img src="dog3-thumb.jpg">
</a>
</div>
<!-- Group 2 -->
<div class="spotlight-group">
<a class="spotlight" href="cat1.jpg">
<img src="cat1-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="cat2.jpg">
<img src="cat2-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="cat3.jpg">
<img src="cat3-thumb.jpg">
</a>
</div>
Each of these groups now opens in its own gallery.
Gallery-Groups are also useful to declare global configuration as markup just once (group options inheritance).
Also you can programmatically use Spotlight via the library API. This way does not require any dependant HTML elements (e.g. the classname "spotlight").
Define a gallery group as follows:
var gallery = [
{ src: "cat1.jpg" },
{ src: "cat2.jpg" },
{ src: "cat3.jpg" }
];
Show gallery with default options:
Spotlight.show(gallery /*, options */);
Pass options declarative via data-attributes in the HTML markup or use the Spotlight API.
When using markup follow these style:
data-option="value"
(change option and value accordingly), e.g.:<a class="spotlight" data-preload="false"></a>
.
When using API follow thse style
{ option: value }
(change option and value accordingly), e.g.:{ preload: false }
.
You can either apply the following data-attributes to the spotlight-group wrapper element or apply them separately to each spotlight anchor element (that also overrides inherited group definitions).
When using API the spotlight-group is represented by the options payload, also you can assign attributes separately to each gallery entry (that also overrides inherited group definitions).
Option | Values | Description | Default |
class | string | Set a classname to this gallery instance to apply custom styles besides themes independently. | null |
media |
"image" "video" "node" | Sets the the type of the media which should be added to the page. | image |
animation |
string Array<string> "fade" "slide" "scale" |
Change animation (use built-ins or custom classname) Note: Markup as comma-separated list, e.g: data-animation="slide,fade,scale" .
| slide, fade, scale |
control |
string Array<string> |
Show/hide control elements as "whitelisted" through a comma-separated list, e.g. data-control="autofit,page,fullscreen"
| page, zoom, autofit, fullscreen, close |
page | true / false | Show/hide page in the toolbar | true |
fullscreen | true / false | Show/hide fullscreen button (automatically hides when not supported by the browser) | true |
zoom | true / false | Show/hide both zoom buttons in the toolbar | true |
zoom-in | true / false | Show/hide zoom-in button in the toolbar | true |
zoom-out | true / false | Show/hide zoom-out button in the toolbar | true |
autofit | true / false | Show/hide autofit button in the toolbar | true |
close | true / false | Show/hide the close icon in the toolbar | true |
theme | true / false | Show/hide theme button | false |
play | true / false / number | Show/hide play button. When passing a numeric value it will be used as a delay in seconds between each tick. | false |
autoslide | true / false | Autoslide when opening gallery. | false |
progress | true / false | Show/hide the animated autoslide progress bar | true |
infinite | true / false | Restart from beginning when no slides left | false |
autohide | true / false / number | Enable/disable automatically hide controls when inactive, also set cooldown time in seconds. | 7 |
theme | string "white" | The classname of your custom theme. The theme "white" is a built-in theme. | null |
title | string / false | Set image title or hide it Note: When using image elements, this attribute will also inherit automatically from <img alt="..."> as well as from <img title="..."> . To prevent this behavior you can set data-title="false" explicitly. This will hide the title regardless of any image alt-attributes. | null |
description | string / false | Set image description or hide it | null |
spinner | true / false | Enable/disable the spinner. When disabled the image will not hide until it is fully loaded, that could be useful for progressive jpeg. | true |
button | str | Enable/disable a button in the footer section, also set button text. Note: When using as markup you have to provide a click target for the button or you can assign an onclick callback via options when used programmatically. | null |
button-href | str | When using a button as markup you can provide a click target for the button, e.g. <a button="click me" button-href="https://domain.com"> . | null |
Option | Values | Description | Default |
src-{size} |
src-1200 src-2400 src-3800 ... |
The tag/key represents the size of the image longest side. The content contains the path or url to the image (e.g. data-src-800="image_800x400.jpg" ).
| null |
preload | true / false | Enable/disable preloading of the next image | true |
fit | "contain" "cover" | Auto-fit the media either as "contain" or as "cover" | contain |
download | true / false | Show/hide the download icon in the toolbar | false |
Most of these options for a video are inherited by the attributes of a standard video element.
Option | Values | Description | Default |
src-{format} |
src-webm src-ogg src-mp4 ... |
The tag/key represents the format of the video. The content contains the path or url to the video (e.g. data-src-webm="video.webm" ).
| null |
fit | "contain" "cover" | Auto-fit the media either as "contain" or as "cover" | contain |
autoplay |
true false | Start the video immediately. | false |
muted |
true false | Start playing as muted. | false |
preload |
true false | Preload the video. | false |
controls |
true false | Show/hide the video controls. | true |
inline |
true false | Make the video player inline (equal to "playsinline"). | false |
poster | string | The path or URL to the preview image. | null |
Option | Values | Description | Default |
index | number | Sets the starting index when showing the gallery by using the Spotlight API. The index starts from 1. | 1 |
onchange | function(index, options) |
Pass a callback function which is get fired every time when a page/slide has changed. The first parameter holds the new page index, the second parameter provides the inherited option payload for this page. Note: The image may not have been fully loaded when the event is fired (preloading phase). The index starts from 1. | null |
onshow onclose | function(index) | These callback functions are called when opening or closing the gallery (the first parameter holds the current page index). | null |
onclick | function(index, options) | A callback function which is getting fired when the optional button in the footer sections was clicked. The first parameter holds the current page index, the second parameter provides the inherited option payload for this page. | null |
<div class="spotlight-group" data-title="Group title" data-animation="fade" data-control="autofit,close">
<a class="spotlight" href="cat1.jpg" data-title="This is a title" data-theme="white">
<img src="cat1-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="cat2.jpg" data-description="This is a description">
<img src="cat2-thumb.jpg">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="cat3.jpg" data-button="Click me" data-button-href="javascript:alert('clicked')">
<img src="cat3-thumb.jpg" alt="This is also a title">
</a>
<a class="spotlight" href="cat4.jpg" data-title="false" data-fit="cover">
<img src="cat4-thumb.jpg" alt="This title is hidden">
</a>
</div>
Note: The 2nd image gets the title "Group title" from the group attributes, on the last image the title is explicitly set to be hidden.
Control elements and animations has to be whitelisted as a comma-separated list when specified. Do not forget to add the "close" control, otherwise you need to provide another way to close the gallery, e.g. via the button in the footer (see the demo page bottom example).
Same result as above but as code:
Spotlight.show([{
src: "cat1.jpg",
title: "This is a title",
theme: "white"
},{
src: "cat2.jpg",
description: "This is a description",
},{
src: "cat3.jpg",
button: "Click me",
onclick: function(){ alert("clicked"); },
title: "This is also a title"
},{
src: "cat4.jpg",
title: false,
fit: "cover"
}],{
// Group Definitions:
title: "Group title",
animation: "fade",
control: "autofit,close"
});
This feature will improve overall performance of your page/application a lot, especially for mobile devices and bad internet connections.
You can declare a set of the same image in multiple dimensions and quality. Spotlight will pick the optimal version by taking into account:
Save your images in several sizes and resolutions and assign the longest dimension of both sides (width, height) like this:
<a class="spotlight" href="cat1.jpg"
data-src-800="cat1_800.jpg"
data-src-1200="cat1_1200.jpg"
data-src-2400="cat1_2400.jpg"
data-src-3800="cat1_3800.jpg">
<img src="cat1-thumb.jpg">
</a>
When clicked on it Spotlight will pick the optimum choice.
This markup completely falls back to standard browser behavior when something goes wrong, also it is SEO friendly.
Same result as above but as code:
Spotlight.show([{
// the default "href" version as fallback isn't required here
"src-800": "cat1_800.jpg",
"src-1200": "cat1_1200.jpg",
"src-2400": "cat1_2400.jpg",
"src-3800": "cat1_3800.jpg"
}]);
All data-attributes for markup a video is inherited by the attributes of a standard video element.
Considering you want to add a standard video element like this as a slide:
<video poster="preview.jpg" muted preload controls autoplay playsinline="false">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4">
<source src="video.ogv" type="video/ogg">
<source src="video.webm" type="video/webm">
</video>
You need a markup like this to represent the video from above:
<a class="spotlight" data-media="video"
data-src-webm="video.webm"
data-src-ogg="video.ogv"
data-src-mp4="video.mp4"
data-poster="preview.jpg"
data-autoplay="true"
data-muted="true"
data-preload="true"
data-controls="true"
data-inline="false">
<img src="preview.jpg">
</a>
Same result as above but as code:
Spotlight.show([{
"media": "video",
"src-webm": "video.webm",
"src-ogg": "video.ogv",
"src-mp4": "video.mp4",
"poster": "preview.jpg",
"autoplay": true,
"muted": true,
"preload": true,
"controls": true,
"inline": false
}]);
You can add custom controls to the header toolbar by API usage only.
The basic concept is very straight forward. You just need to assign a unique classname along with an event listener. Basically you have to follow these steps.
Spotlight.init();
The gallery automatically initialize when first time open, so you can also add custom control inside the "onshow" callback.
var button = Spotlight.addControl("my-control", function(event){
// handle click event
console.log("button clicked");
});
/* your control name will be prefixed by "spl-" automatically */
.spl-my-control{
background-image: url(icon.svg);
background-size: 22px;
}
Important: custom control classes gets always css-prefixed by "spl-" automatically to prevent classname collision!
Removing an added control:
Spotlight.removeControl("my-control");
Let's take a useful example of dynamically adding a "like button" in the toolbar. You can see a live demo of this example on the demo page (bottom section).
Providing a gallery as normal and add a custom attribute "like", which stores the current like state of each image.
const gallery = [{
src: "image1.jpg",
like: false
},{
src: "image2.jpg",
like: false,
},{
src: "image3.jpg",
like: false
}];
Define a CSS class to style your button, e.g.:
/* custom classes are always prefixed by "spl-" automatically */
.spl-like{
background-image: url(heart-outline.svg);
background-size: 22px;
}
/* optionally, additional state to toggle the button: */
.spl-like.on{
background-image: url(heart.svg);
}
Please keep in mind, when your custom control has the name "like" the corresponding classname always gets prefixed by "spl-" and becomes "spl-like" to prevent classname collision. Do not name your control in prefixed style like "spl-like", because that will prefix this also (and becomes "spl-spl-like").
We need some variables to store some state which is used in the callback handler later:
// store the button element to apply dom changes to it
let like;
// store the current index
let slide = 0;
Implement a click event handler of the like button, e.g.:
function handler(event){
// get the current like state
// at this point we use the stored last index from the variable "slide"
const current_like_state = !gallery[slide].like;
// toggles the current like state
gallery[slide].like = current_like_state;
// assign the state as class to visually represent the current like state
this.classList.toggle("on");
if(current_like_state){
// do something if liked ...
}
else{
// do something if unliked ...
}
}
The keyword
this
corresponds to the current clicked element (the like icon in this example).
Finally, create the gallery and provide some callbacks to insert the custom control dynamically:
Spotlight.show(gallery, {
// fires when gallery opens
onshow: function(index){
// the method "addControl" returns the new created control element
like = Spotlight.addControl("like", handler);
},
// fires when gallery change to another page
onchange: function(index, options){
// store the current index for the button listener
// the slide index start from 1 (as "page 1")
slide = index - 1;
// initially apply the stored like state when slide is openened
// at this point we use the stored like element
like.classList.toggle("on", gallery[slide].like);
},
// fires when gallery is requested to close
onclose: function(index){
// remove the custom button, so you are able
// to open next gallery without this custom control
Spotlight.removeControl("like");
}
});
You did not need to remove the custom control everytime. When all your galleries have this custom control, then simply add the control after you call Spotlight.init()
once.
Initialize the Spotlight gallery once:
Spotlight.init();
Add the custom control once:
like = Spotlight.addControl("like", handler);
Open the gallery and just provide an "onchange" handler:
Spotlight.show(gallery, {
onchange: function(index, options){
slide = index - 1;
like.classList.toggle("on", gallery[slide].like);
}
});
That is the same custom like button from above example, just shorter but also non-dynamically added for all gallery instances.
With node fragments you can simply add everything as a slide. This way you can create your own full customized slides with its own interactions inside them.
You can use this feature completely by markup by providing a query selector as "src" which points to a node in your document.
This workaround is also compatible if you are using server-side rendering.
You can use a hidden backstore optionally which holds the fragments to be inserted as a slide, e.g.:
<div style="display: none">
<div id="fragment" style="width: 100%">
<h1>Embedded Node Fragment</h1>
<p>Any HTML Content...</p>
</div>
</div>
Provide a dom query selector as "src" which points to a node in your document:
<a class="spotlight" data-media="node" data-src="#fragment">
Click here to open
</a>
When closing the gallery or change the page to another slide, the fragment will automatically move back to its original position (the hidden backstore in this example).
You can add nodes as slide which are not part of the document via the API (e.g. fragments, templates, offscreen nodes). Also, you can create an iframe to load extern contents.
You can create your own fragments/templates and add the root node directly as "src":
Spotlight.show([{
media: "node",
src: (function(){
const iframe = document.createElement("iframe");
iframe.src = "https://www.youtube.com/embed/tgbNymZ7vqY";
return iframe;
}())
}]);
Or use your preferred templating engine and add the root node as "src":
Mikado(template).mount(root).render(data);
Spotlight.show([{
media: "node",
src: root
}]);
Define a gallery group as follows:
var gallery = [{
title: "Image 1",
description: "This is a description.",
src: "gallery/london-1758181.jpg"
},{
title: "Image 2",
description: "This is a description.",
src: "gallery/sea-1975403.jpg"
},{
title: "Image 3",
description: "This is a description.",
src: "gallery/newport-beach-2089906.jpg"
}];
Show gallery with default options:
Spotlight.show(gallery);
Show gallery with custom options:
Spotlight.show(gallery, {
index: 2,
theme: "white",
autohide: false,
control: ["autofit", "zoom", "close"]
});
Close gallery:
Spotlight.close();
Next slide:
Spotlight.next();
Previous slide:
Spotlight.prev();
Goto slide:
Spotlight.goto(3);
Zoom to:
Spotlight.zoom(1.5);
Toggle theme:
Spotlight.theme();
Set theme:
Spotlight.theme("white");
Spotlight.theme("dark");
Toggle fullscreen:
Spotlight.fullscreen();
Set fullscreen:
Spotlight.fullscreen(true);
Spotlight.fullscreen(false);
Toggle autofit:
Spotlight.autofit();
Set autofit:
Spotlight.autofit(true);
Spotlight.autofit(false);
Toggle menu:
Spotlight.menu();
Set menu:
Spotlight.menu(true);
Spotlight.menu(false);
Download current image:
Spotlight.download();
import Spotlight from "./spotlight.js";
Spotlight.show(
[ /* Gallery */ ],
{ /* Options */ }
);
You can also import any of the Spotlight methods just as you need:
import { show, close, goto } from "./spotlight.js";
show([/* Gallery */], {/* Options */});
// ....
goto(5);
// ....
close();
Modern build tools will apply dead code elimination when just importing methods your application needs.
To add custom styling just override CSS classes accordingly:
#spotlight { /* main font styles, background */ }
.spl-page { /* current page (toolbar) */ }
.spl-fullscreen { /* button fullscreen (toolbar) */ }
.spl-autofit { /* button autofit (toolbar) */ }
.spl-zoom-out { /* button zoom out (toolbar) */ }
.spl-zoom-in { /* button zoom in (toolbar) */ }
.spl-theme { /* button theme (toolbar) */ }
.spl-play { /* button autoplay (toolbar) */ }
.spl-download { /* button download (toolbar) */ }
.spl-close { /* button close (toolbar) */ }
.spl-prev { /* button page prev */ }
.spl-next { /* button page next */ }
.spl-spinner { /* preloading spinner */ }
.spl-spinner.spin { /* show spinner */ }
.spl-spinner.error { /* show loading error */ }
.spl-title { /* image title */ }
.spl-description { /* image description */ }
.spl-button { /* button footer */ }
.spl-header { /* the header wrapping element */ }
.spl-footer { /* the footer wrapping element */ }
Customize builtin themes
Use the same classes as above:
#spotlight.white .spl-title{
/* image title in white theme */
}
#spotlight{
/* main background in dark theme */
}
Create New Themes
Define styles, e.g. for the custom theme name "my-theme":
.my-theme .spl-title{
/* image title in custom theme */
}
.my-theme{
/* main background in custom theme */
}
Apply custom theme via markdown:
<a class="spotlight" href="cat.jpg" data-theme="my-theme">
<img src="cat_thumb.jpg">
</a>
Or apply custom theme via API:
Spotlight.show([ /* Gallery */ ],{
theme: "my-theme"
});
You could also set themes per image separately:
Spotlight.show([
{ src: "cat1.jpg" }, // default theme
{ src: "cat2.jpg", theme: "my-theme" },
{ src: "cat3.jpg", theme: "white" }
]);
If you like to apply styles independently besides themes you can simply do that by adding a class during initialization:
Spotlight.show([
{ src: "cat1.jpg" }, // default theme
{ src: "cat2.jpg", theme: "my-theme" },
{ src: "cat3.jpg", theme: "white" }
],{
class: "custom"
});
In your stylesheet you can apply you custom styles, .e.g.:
#spotlight.custom .spl-title{
font-size: 15px;
}
Important: The style class for a custom animation describes the hidden state of an image.
You can define your own custom animation by:
1. Define the styles in default state (when image is shown), e.g.:
.spl-pane > *{
filter: grayscale(0);
transition: filter 1s ease-out,
opacity 0.5s ease-out;
}
2. Define styles for the hidden state of the transition by adding a custom classname:
.spl-pane .my-animation{
filter: grayscale(1);
opacity: 0;
}
Apply custom animation via markdown:
<a class="spotlight" href="cat.jpg" data-animation="my-animation">
<img src="cat_thumb.jpg">
</a>
Or apply custom animation via API:
Spotlight.show([ /* Gallery */ ],{
animation: "my-animation"
});
You could also set animations per image separately:
Spotlight.show([
{ src: "cat1.jpg" }, // default animation
{ src: "cat2.jpg", animation: "my-animation" },
{ src: "cat3.jpg", animation: "slide,fade" }
]);
The example above will apply the animation to all instances of your gallery. When you want to add specific animation to each gallery you need to add a class
in your options:
Spotlight.show([
{ src: "cat1.jpg" },
{ src: "cat2.jpg" },
{ src: "cat3.jpg" }
],{
animation: "my-animation",
class: "custom"
});
Then, add your classname (context selector) to your CSS for the visible state of the animation:
.custom .spl-pane > *{
filter: grayscale(0);
transition: filter 1s ease-out,
opacity 0.5s ease-out;
}
Now you can assign different animations to each gallery.
Go to the root directory of Spotlight and run:
npm install
Perform a build:
npm run build
The final build is located in the dist/
folder.
Copyright 2019-2021 Nextapps GmbH
Released under the Apache 2.0 License
FAQs
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The npm package spotlight.js receives a total of 995 weekly downloads. As such, spotlight.js popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that spotlight.js demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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