A JavaScript library to load and transform image files.
- Demo
- Description
- Setup
- Usage
- Image loading
- Image scaling
- Requirements
- API
- Options
- Meta data parsing
- Exif parser
- IPTC parser
- License
- Credits
JavaScript Load Image is a library to load images provided as File or Blob objects or via URL. It returns an optionally scaled and/or cropped HTML img or canvas element. It also provides methods to parse image meta data to extract IPTC and Exif tags as well as embedded thumbnail images and to restore the complete image header after resizing.
Include the (combined and minified) JavaScript Load Image script in your HTML markup:
<script src="js/load-image.all.min.js"></script>
Or alternatively, choose which components you want to include:
<script src="js/load-image.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-scale.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-meta.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-fetch.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-orientation.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-exif.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-exif-map.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-iptc.js"></script>
<script src="js/load-image-iptc-map.js"></script>
In your application code, use the loadImage() function like this:
document.getElementById('file-input').onchange = function (e) {
loadImage(
e.target.files[0],
function (img) {
document.body.appendChild(img);
},
{maxWidth: 600} // Options
);
};
It is also possible to use the image scaling functionality with an existing image:
var scaledImage = loadImage.scale(
img, // img or canvas element
{maxWidth: 600}
);
The JavaScript Load Image library has zero dependencies.
However, JavaScript Load Image is a very suitable complement to the Canvas to Blob library.
The loadImage() function accepts a
File or
Blob object or a simple image URL
(e.g. 'https://example.org/image.png'
) as first argument.
If a File or
Blob is passed as parameter, it
returns a HTML img element if the browser supports the
URL API or a
FileReader object if
supported, or false.
It always returns a HTML
img element when
passing an image URL:
document.getElementById('file-input').onchange = function (e) {
var loadingImage = loadImage(
e.target.files[0],
function (img) {
document.body.appendChild(img);
},
{maxWidth: 600}
);
if (!loadingImage) {
// Alternative code ...
}
};
The img element or FileReader object returned by the loadImage() function allows to abort the loading process by setting the onload and onerror event handlers to null:
document.getElementById('file-input').onchange = function (e) {
var loadingImage = loadImage(
e.target.files[0],
function (img) {
document.body.appendChild(img);
},
{maxWidth: 600}
);
loadingImage.onload = loadingImage.onerror = null;
};
The second argument must be a callback function, which is called when the image has been loaded or an error occurred while loading the image. The callback function is passed one argument, which is either a HTML img element, a canvas element, or an Event object of type error:
var imageUrl = "https://example.org/image.png";
loadImage(
imageUrl,
function (img) {
if(img.type === "error") {
console.log("Error loading image " + imageUrl);
} else {
document.body.appendChild(img);
}
},
{maxWidth: 600}
);
The optional third argument to loadImage() is a map of options:
- maxWidth: Defines the maximum width of the img/canvas element.
- maxHeight: Defines the maximum height of the img/canvas element.
- minWidth: Defines the minimum width of the img/canvas element.
- minHeight: Defines the minimum height of the img/canvas element.
- sourceWidth: The width of the sub-rectangle of the source image to draw
into the destination canvas.
Defaults to the source image width and requirescanvas: true
. - sourceHeight: The height of the sub-rectangle of the source image to draw
into the destination canvas.
Defaults to the source image height and requirescanvas: true
. - top: The top margin of the sub-rectangle of the source image.
Defaults to0
and requirescanvas: true
. - right: The right margin of the sub-rectangle of the source image.
Defaults to0
and requirescanvas: true
. - bottom: The bottom margin of the sub-rectangle of the source image.
Defaults to0
and requirescanvas: true
. - left: The left margin of the sub-rectangle of the source image.
Defaults to0
and requirescanvas: true
. - contain: Scales the image up/down to contain it in the max dimensions if
set to
true
.
This emulates the CSS feature background-image: contain. - cover: Scales the image up/down to cover the max dimensions with the image
dimensions if set to
true
.
This emulates the CSS feature background-image: cover. - aspectRatio: Crops the image to the given aspect ratio (e.g.
16/9
).
Setting theaspectRatio
also enables thecrop
option. - pixelRatio: Defines the ratio of the canvas pixels to the physical image
pixels on the screen.
Should be set towindow.devicePixelRatio
unless the scaled image is not rendered on screen.
Defaults to1
and requirescanvas: true
. - downsamplingRatio: Defines the ratio in which the image is downsampled.
By default, images are downsampled in one step. With a ratio of0.5
, each step scales the image to half the size, before reaching the target dimensions.
Requirescanvas: true
. - crop: Crops the image to the maxWidth/maxHeight constraints if set to
true
.
Enabling thecrop
option also enables thecanvas
option. - orientation: Transform the canvas according to the specified Exif
orientation, which can be an
integer
in the range of1
to8
or the boolean valuetrue
.
When set totrue
, it will set the orientation value based on the EXIF data of the image, which will be parsed automatically if the exif library is available.
Setting theorientation
also enables thecanvas
option.
Settingorientation
totrue
also enables themeta
option. - meta: Automatically parses the image meta data if set to
true
.
The meta data is passed to the callback as second argument.
If the file is given as URL and the browser supports the fetch API, fetches the file as Blob to be able to parse the meta data. - canvas: Returns the image as
canvas element if set to
true
. - crossOrigin: Sets the crossOrigin property on the img element for loading CORS enabled images.
- noRevoke: By default, the
created object URL
is revoked after the image has been loaded, except when this option is set to
true
.
They can be used the following way:
loadImage(
fileOrBlobOrUrl,
function (img) {
document.body.appendChild(img);
},
{
maxWidth: 600,
maxHeight: 300,
minWidth: 100,
minHeight: 50,
canvas: true
}
);
All settings are optional. By default, the image is returned as HTML img element without any image size restrictions.
If the Load Image Meta extension is included, it is also possible to parse image
meta data.
The extension provides the method loadImage.parseMetaData, which can be used
the following way:
loadImage.parseMetaData(
fileOrBlob,
function (data) {
if (!data.imageHead) {
return;
}
// Combine data.imageHead with the image body of a resized file
// to create scaled images with the original image meta data, e.g.:
var blob = new Blob([
data.imageHead,
// Resized images always have a head size of 20 bytes,
// including the JPEG marker and a minimal JFIF header:
loadImage.blobSlice.call(resizedImage, 20)
], {type: resizedImage.type});
},
{
maxMetaDataSize: 262144,
disableImageHead: false
}
);
The third argument is an options object which defines the maximum number of bytes to parse for the image meta data, allows to disable the imageHead creation and is also passed along to segment parsers registered via loadImage extensions, e.g. the Exif and IPTC parsers.
Note:
Blob objects of resized images can be created via
canvas.toBlob().
If you include the Load Image Exif Parser extension, the argument passed to the
callback for parseMetaData will contain the additional property exif if
Exif data could be found in the given image.
The exif object stores the parsed Exif tags:
var orientation = data.exif[0x0112];
It also provides an exif.get() method to retrieve the tag value via the tag's mapped name:
var orientation = data.exif.get('Orientation');
By default, the only available mapped names are Orientation and
Thumbnail.
If you also include the Load Image Exif Map library, additional tag mappings
become available, as well as two additional methods, exif.getText() and
exif.getAll():
var flashText = data.exif.getText('Flash'); // e.g.: 'Flash fired, auto mode',
// A map of all parsed tags with their mapped names/text as keys/values:
var allTags = data.exif.getAll();
The Exif parser also adds additional options for the parseMetaData method, to disable certain aspects of the parser:
- disableExif: Disables Exif parsing.
- disableExifThumbnail: Disables parsing of the Exif Thumbnail.
- disableExifSub: Disables parsing of the Exif Sub IFD.
- disableExifGps: Disables parsing of the Exif GPS Info IFD.
If you include the Load Image IPTC Parser extension, the argument passed to the
callback for parseMetaData will contain the additional property iptc if
IPTC data could be found in the given image.
The iptc object stores the parsed IPTC tags:
var objectname = data.iptc[0x5];
It also provides an iptc.get() method to retrieve the tag value via the tag's mapped name:
var objectname = data.iptc.get('ObjectName');
By default, the only available mapped names are ObjectName.
If you also include the Load Image IPTC Map library, additional tag mappings
become available, as well as two additional methods, iptc.getText() and
iptc.getAll():
var keywords = data.iptc.getText('Keywords'); // e.g.: ['Weather','Sky']
// A map of all parsed tags with their mapped names/text as keys/values:
var allTags = data.iptc.getAll();
The IPTC parser also adds additional options for the parseMetaData method, to disable certain aspects of the parser:
- disableIptc: Disables IPTC parsing.
The JavaScript Load Image script is released under the MIT license.
- Image meta data handling implementation based on the help and contribution of Achim Stöhr.
- Exif tags mapping based on Jacob Seidelin's exif-js library.
- IPTC parser implementation by Dave Bevan.