LazyLoad is a lightweight and flexible script that speeds up your web application by deferring the loading of your below-the-fold images, videos and iframes to when they will enter the viewport. It's written in plain "vanilla" JavaScript, it leverages the IntersectionObserver API, it supports responsive images and enables native lazy loading. See notable features for more.
➡️ Jump to: 👨💻 Getting started - HTML - 👩💻 Getting started - Script - 🥧 Recipes - 📺 Demos - 😋 Tips & tricks - 🔌 API - 😯 Notable features
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In order to make your content be loaded by LazyLoad, you must use some data-
attributes instead of the actual attributes. Examples below.
<img alt="A lazy image" data-src="lazy.jpg" />
<img alt="A lazy image" src="lazy-lowQuality.jpg" data-src="lazy.jpg" />
<img
alt="A lazy image"
class="lazy"
data-src="lazy.jpg"
data-srcset="lazy_400.jpg 400w, lazy_800.jpg 800w"
data-sizes="100w"
/>
To have a low quality placeholder, add the src
attribute pointing to a very small version of the image. E.g. src="lazy_10.jpg"
.
<picture>
<source media="(min-width: 1200px)" data-srcset="lazy_1200.jpg 1x, lazy_2400.jpg 2x" />
<source media="(min-width: 800px)" data-srcset="lazy_800.jpg 1x, lazy_1600.jpg 2x" />
<img alt="A lazy image" class="lazy" data-src="lazy.jpg" />
</picture>
To have a low quality placeholder, add the src
attribute pointing to a very small version of the image to the img
tag. E.g. src="lazy_10.jpg"
.
<picture>
<source
type="image/webp"
data-srcset="lazy_400.webp 400w, lazy_800.webp 800w"
data-sizes="100w"
/>
<img
alt="A lazy image"
class="lazy"
data-src="lazy.jpg"
data-srcset="lazy_400.jpg 400w, lazy_800.jpg 800w"
data-sizes="100w"
/>
</picture>
To have a low quality placeholder, add the src
attribute pointing to a very small version of the image to the img
tag. E.g. src="lazy_10.jpg"
.
⚠ IMPORTANT NOTE: To display content images on your pages, always use the img
tag. This would benefit the SEO and the accessibility of your website. To understand if your images are content or background, ask yourself: "would my website user like to see those images when printing out the page?". If the answer is "yes", then your images are content images and you should avoid using background images to display them.
Single background image:
<div class="lazy" data-bg="lazy.jpg"></div>
Single background, with HiDPI screen support:
<div class="lazy" data-bg="lazy.jpg" data-bg-hidpi="lazy@2x.jpg"></div>
Multiple backgrounds:
<div
class="lazy"
data-bg-multi="url(lazy-head.jpg), url(lazy-body.jpg), linear-gradient(#fff, #ccc)"
>
...
</div>
ℹ Please note that you must use url()
to wrap the URLs in your data-bg-multi
attributes.
Multiple backgrounds, HiDPI screen support:
<div
class="lazy"
data-bg-multi="url(lazy-head.jpg), url(lazy-body.jpg), linear-gradient(#fff, #ccc)"
data-bg-multi-hidpi="url(lazy-head@2x.jpg), url(lazy-body@2x.jpg), linear-gradient(#fff, #ccc)"
>
...
</div>
ℹ Please note that you must use url()
to wrap the URLs in your data-bg-multi-hidpi
attributes.
<video class="lazy" controls width="620" data-src="lazy.mp4" data-poster="lazy.jpg">
<source type="video/mp4" data-src="lazy.mp4" />
<source type="video/ogg" data-src="lazy.ogg" />
<source type="video/avi" data-src="lazy.avi" />
</video>
Please note that the video poster can be lazily loaded too.
<iframe class="lazy" data-src="lazyFrame.html"></iframe>
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The latest, recommended version of LazyLoad is 15.2.0.
Quickly understand how to upgrade from a previous version reading the practical upgrade guide.
On browser NOT supporting IntersectionObserver such as Internet explorer and older versions of Safari you can choose whether or not to add a javascript polyfill for it.
If you don't use a polyfill, LazyLoad will load all the images as soon as it's downloaded and executed. The number of impacted users would be relatively small, so this is a completely acceptable choice.
If you prefer to load a polyfill, the regular LazyLoad behaviour is granted.
The easiest way to use LazyLoad is to include the script from a CDN:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/vanilla-lazyload@15.2.0/dist/lazyload.min.js"></script>
Or, with the IntersectionObserver polyfill:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/intersection-observer@0.7.0/intersection-observer.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/vanilla-lazyload@15.2.0/dist/lazyload.min.js"></script>
Then, in your javascript code:
var lazyLoadInstance = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: ".lazy"
// ... more custom settings?
});
To be sure that DOM for your lazy content is ready when you instantiate LazyLoad, place the script tag right before the closing </body>
tag. If more DOM arrives later, e.g. via an AJAX call, you'll need to call lazyLoadInstance.update();
to make LazyLoad check the DOM again.
lazyLoadInstance.update();
You can use RequireJS to dynamically and asynchronously load modules in your website.
You can also find the original W3C'S IntersectionObserver Polyfill packed in AMD so you can require
it conditionally, along with LazyLoad.
Include RequireJS:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/requirejs@2.3.6/bin/r.min.js"></script>
Then require
the AMD version of LazyLoad, like this:
var lazyLoadAmdUrl = "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/vanilla-lazyload@15.2.0/dist/lazyload.amd.min.js";
var polyfillAmdUrl = "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/intersection-observer-amd@2.0.1/intersection-observer-amd.js";
/// Dynamically define the dependencies
var dependencies = [
"IntersectionObserver" in window
? null // <- Doesn't require the polyfill
: polyfillAmdUrl,
lazyLoadAmdUrl
];
// Initialize LazyLoad inside the callback
require(dependencies, function(_, LazyLoad) {
var lazyLoadInstance = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: ".lazy"
// ... more custom settings?
});
}
If you prefer, it's possible to include LazyLoad's script using async
script and initialize it as soon as it's loaded.
To do so, you must define the options before including the script. You can pass:
{}
an object to get a single instance of LazyLoad[{}, {}]
an array of objects to get multiple instances of LazyLoad, each one with different options.
<script>
// Set the options to make LazyLoad self-initialize
window.lazyLoadOptions = {
elements_selector: ".lazy"
// ... more custom settings?
};
</script>
Then include the script.
<script
async
src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/vanilla-lazyload@15.2.0/dist/lazyload.min.js"
></script>
Possibly place the script tag right before the closing </body>
tag. If you can't do that, LazyLoad could be executed before the browser has loaded all the DOM, and you'll need to call its update()
method to make it check the DOM again.
Same as above, but you must put the addEventListener
code shown below before including the async
script.
<script>
// Set the options to make LazyLoad self-initialize
window.lazyLoadOptions = {
elements_selector: ".lazy"
// ... more custom settings?
};
// Listen to the initialization event and get the instance of LazyLoad
window.addEventListener(
"LazyLoad::Initialized",
function (event) {
window.lazyLoadInstance = event.detail.instance;
},
false
);
</script>
Then include the script.
<script
async
src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/vanilla-lazyload@15.2.0/dist/lazyload.min.js"
></script>
Now you'll be able to call its methods, like:
lazyLoadInstance.update();
Note about Internet Explorer: because this technique uses a CustomEvent
(learn more) to trigger the LazyLoad::Initialized
event, you might want to add this micro polyfill to make it work on Internet Explorer.
<script>
// CustomEvent micro-polyfill for Internet Explorer
(function () {
if (typeof window.CustomEvent === "function") {
return false;
}
function CustomEvent(event, params) {
params = params || { bubbles: false, cancelable: false, detail: undefined };
var evt = document.createEvent("CustomEvent");
evt.initCustomEvent(event, params.bubbles, params.cancelable, params.detail);
return evt;
}
CustomEvent.prototype = window.Event.prototype;
window.CustomEvent = CustomEvent;
})();
</script>
If you prefer to install LazyLoad locally in your project, you can!
npm install vanilla-lazyload
bower install vanilla-lazyload
Download one the latest releases. The files you need are inside the dist
folder. If you don't know which one to pick, use lazyload.min.js
, or read about bundles.
Should you install LazyLoad locally, you can import it as ES module like the following:
import LazyLoad from "vanilla-lazyload";
It's also possible (but unadvised) to use the require
commonJS syntax.
More information about bundling LazyLoad with WebPack are available on this specific repo.
Take a look at this example of usage of React with LazyLoad on Sandbox.
This implementation takes the same props that you would normally pass to the img
tag, but it renders a lazy image. Feel free to fork and improve it!
Inside the dist
folder you will find different bundles.
Filename | Module Type | Advantages |
---|---|---|
lazyload.min.js |
UMD (Universal Module Definition) | Works pretty much everywhere, even in common-js contexts |
lazyload.iife.min.js |
IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression) | Works as in-page <script src="..."> , ~0.5kb smaller than UMD version |
lazyload.amd.min.js |
AMD (Asynchronous Module Definition) | Works with RequireJS module loader, ~0.5kb smaller than UMD version |
lazyload.esm.js |
ES Module | Exports LazyLoad so you can import it in your project both using <script type="module" src="..."> and a bundler like WebPack or Rollup |
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This is the section where you can find ready to copy & paste code for your convenience.
💡 Use case: when you want to lazily load images, but the number of images change in the scrolling area changes, maybe because they are added asynchronously.
HTML
The HTML to use depends on your case, see other recipes' HTML
Javascript
var myLazyLoad = new LazyLoad();
// After your content has changed...
myLazyLoad.update();
💡 Use case: you want to use the
use_native
option to delegate the loading of images to the browsers engine where supported, but you also want to lazily load backgroud images or videos.
HTML
<img class="lazy" alt="A lazy image" data-src="lazy.jpg" />
<iframe class="lazy" data-src="lazyFrame.html"></iframe>
<video class="lazy" controls data-src="lazy.mp4" data-poster="lazy.jpg">...</video>
<div class="lazy" data-bg="lazy.jpg"></div>
Javascript
// Instance using native lazy loading
const lazyContent = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: "img.lazy",
use_native: true // <-- there you go
});
// Instance without native lazy loading
const lazyBackground = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: "iframe.lazy, video.lazy, div.lazy"
// DON'T PASS use_native: true HERE
});
💡 Use case: when your scrolling container is not the main browser window, but a scrolling container.
HTML
<div class="scrollingPanel" id="scrollingPanel">
<!-- Set of images -->
</div>
Javascript
var myLazyLoad = new LazyLoad({
container: document.getElementById("scrollingPanel")
});
If you have multiple scrolling panels, you can use the following markup and code.
HTML
<div id="scrollingPanel1" class="scrollingPanel">
<!-- Set of images -->
</div>
<div id="scrollingPanel2" class="scrollingPanel">
<!-- Set of images -->
</div>
Javascript
var myLazyLoad1 = new LazyLoad({
container: document.getElementById("scrollingPanel1")
});
var myLazyLoad2 = new LazyLoad({
container: document.getElementById("scrollingPanel2")
});
💡 Use case: to cancel the loading of images that exited the viewport, in order to reserve bandwidth for the new images that entered the viewport.
HTML
<img class="lazy" alt="A lazy image" data-src="lazy.jpg" width="220" height="280" />
Javascript
var myLazyLoad = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: ".lazy",
cancel_on_exit: true
});
💡 Use case: to start loading elements that stayed inside the viewport for a given amount of time.
HTML
<img class="lazy" alt="A lazy image" data-src="lazy.jpg" width="220" height="280" />
Javascript
var myLazyLoad = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: ".lazy",
load_delay: 300 //adjust according to use case
});
💡 Use case: when you have a lot of scrolling containers in the page and you want to instantiate a LazyLoad only on the ones that are in the viewport.
HTML
<div class="horzContainer">
<img
src=""
alt="Row 01, col 01"
data-src="https://placeholdit.imgix.net/~text?txtsize=19&txt=row_01_col_01&w=200&h=200"
/>
<img
src=""
alt="Row 01, col 02"
data-src="https://placeholdit.imgix.net/~text?txtsize=19&txt=row_01_col_02&w=200&h=200"
/>
<!-- ... -->
</div>
<div class="horzContainer">
<img
src=""
alt="Row 02, col 01"
data-src="https://placeholdit.imgix.net/~text?txtsize=19&txt=row_02_col_01&w=200&h=200"
/>
<img
src=""
alt="Row 02, col 02"
data-src="https://placeholdit.imgix.net/~text?txtsize=19&txt=row_02_col_02&w=200&h=200"
/>
<!-- ... -->
</div>
Javascript
var lazyLoadInstances = [];
// The "lazyLazy" instance of lazyload is used (kinda improperly)
// to check when the .horzContainer divs enter the viewport
var lazyLazy = new LazyLoad({
elements_selector: ".horzContainer",
// When the .horzContainer div enters the viewport...
callback_enter: function (el) {
// ...instantiate a new LazyLoad on it
var oneLL = new LazyLoad({
container: el
});
// Optionally push it in the lazyLoadInstances
// array to keep track of the instances
lazyLoadInstances.push(oneLL);
}
});
That's it. Whenever a .horzContainer
element enters the viewport, LazyLoad calls the callback_enter
function, which creates a new instance of LazyLoad on the .horzContainer
element.
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Didn't find the recipe that exactly matches your case? We have demos!
The demos folder contains 20+ use cases of LazyLoad. You might find there what you're looking for.
Type | Title | Code | Live demo |
---|---|---|---|
Content | Simple lazy loaded images, not using any placeholder | Code | Live |
Content | Lazy images that use an inline SVG as a placeholder | Code | Live |
Content | Lazy images that use an external SVG file as a placeholder | Code | Live |
Content | Lazy responsive images with srcset |
Code | Live |
Content | Lazy responsive images with the <picture> tag and the media attribute (art direction) |
Code | Live |
Content | Lazy responsive images with srcset and sizes (using data-sizes ) |
Code | Live |
Content | Lazy responsive images with srcset and sizes (using plain sizes ) |
Code | Live |
Content | Lazy video with multiple <source> tags |
Code | Live |
Content | Lazy loading background images | Code | Live |
Content | Lazy WebP images with the <picture> tag and the type attribute for WebP |
Code | Live |
Loading | Asynchronous loading LazyLoad with requireJS | Code | Live |
Loading | Asynchronous loading LazyLoad + InterserctionObserver with requireJS | Code | Live |
Loading | Asynchronous loading LazyLoad with <script async> |
Code | Live |
Technique | Fade in images as they load | Code | Live |
Technique | Lazily create lazyload instances | Code | Live |
Technique | How to manage the print of a page with lazy images | Code | Live |
Technique | A popup layer containing lazy images in a scrolling container | Code | Live |
Settings | Multiple scrolling containers | Code | Live |
Settings | Single scrolling container | Code | Live |
Settings | Delay loading of lazy images | Code | Live |
Settings | Cancel downloads on exit, optimizing for slow connections | Code | Live |
Methods | How to destroy() LazyLoad |
Code | Live |
Methods | Adding dynamic content, then update() LazyLoad |
Code | Live |
Methods | Adding dynamic content, then update() LazyLoad passing a NodeSet of elements |
Code | Live |
Methods | Load punctual images using the load() method |
Code | Live |
Methods | Load all images at once using loadAll() |
Code | Live |
Test | Test for multiple thresholds | Code | Live |
Test | Test behaviour with hidden images | Code | Live |
Test | Test of delay loading | Code | Live |
Test | Test performance, lazy loading of hundreds of images | Code | Live |
Native | Test the native lazy loading of images WITHOUT any line of javascript, not even this script | Code | Live |
Native | Test the native lazy loading of images conditionally using the use_native option (see API) |
Code | Live |
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It's a good idea to make sure that your lazy images occupy some space even before they are loaded, otherwise the img
elements will be shrinked to zero-height, causing your layout to reflow and making lazyload inefficient.
There are many ways to avoid content reflow. I've tested three of them and found that the fastest is to avoid using a placeholder at all, and use the vertical padding trick.
<div class="image-wrapper">
<img class="lazy image" alt="An image" data-src="lazy.jpg" />
</div>
.image-wrapper {
width: 100%;
height: 0;
padding-bottom: 150%; /* You define this doing image height / width * 100% */
position: relative;
}
.image {
width: 100%;
height: auto;
position: absolute;
}
More info in Sizing Fluid Image Containers with a Little CSS Padding Hack by Andy Shora. Find also a useful SASS mixin to maintain aspect ratio on CSS tricks.
If you can't use the vertical padding trick for some reason, the best option is to use an SVG placeholder of the same ratio of the lazy images.
<img
src="data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' viewBox='0 0 3 2'%3E%3C/svg%3E"
data-src="//picsum.photos/900/600"
alt="Lazy loading test image"
/>
Alternatively (but less efficiently) you can use a tiny, scaled-down version of your images as a placeholder, stretching them to the final size of the images, and obtain a blur-up effect when the full images load.
Using a placeholder image will also make sure that browsers don't show your alt
content instead of the images before the lazy-loading starts.
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The new LazyLoad()
instruction you execute on your page can take two parameters:
Parameter | What to pass | Required | Default value | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Options | The option object for this instance of LazyLoad | No | {} |
Plain Object |
Nodeset | A NodeSet of elements to execute LazyLoad on | No | null |
NodeSet |
The most common usage of LazyLoad constructor is to pass only the options object (see "options" in the next section). For example:
var aLazyLoad = new LazyLoad({
/* options here */
});
In the rare cases where you can't or don't want to select the elements using elements_selector
and you have a reference variable to your elements set (can be a NodeSet or an array of elements), you can pass the elements set as the second parameter.
var elementsToLazyLoad = getElementSetFromSomewhere();
var aLazyLoad = new LazyLoad(
{
/* options here */
},
elementsToLazyLoad
);
For every instance of LazyLoad you can pass in some options, to alter its default behaviour. Here's the list of the options.
Name | Meaning | Default value | Example value |
---|---|---|---|
container |
The scrolling container of the elements in the elements_selector option. |
document |
document.querySelector('.scrollPanel') |
elements_selector |
The CSS selector of the elements to load lazily, which will be selected as descendants of the container object. |
"img" |
".images img.lazy" |
threshold |
A number of pixels representing the outer distance off the scrolling area from which to start loading the elements. | 300 |
0 |
thresholds |
Similar to threshold , but accepting multiple values and both px and % units. It maps directly to the rootMargin property of IntersectionObserver (read more), so it must be a string with a syntax similar to the CSS margin property. You can use it when you need to have different thresholds for the scrolling area. It overrides threshold when passed. |
null |
"500px 10%" |
data_src |
The name of the data attribute containing the element URL to load, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-src" , just pass "src" |
"src" |
"lazy-src" |
data_srcset |
The name of the data attribute containing the image URL set to load, in either img and source tags, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-srcset" , just pass "srcset" |
"srcset" |
"lazy-srcset" |
data_sizes |
The name of the data attribute containing the sizes attribute to use, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-sizes" , just pass "sizes" |
"sizes" |
"lazy-sizes" |
data_bg |
The name of the data attribute containing the URL of background-image to load lazily, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-bg" , just pass "bg" . The attribute value must be a valid value for background-image , including the url() part of the CSS instruction. |
"bg" |
"lazy-bg" |
data_bg_hidpi |
The name of the data attribute containing the URL of background-image to load lazily on HiDPI screens, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-bg-hidpi" , just pass "bg-hidpi" . The attribute value must be a valid value for background-image , including the url() part of the CSS instruction. |
"bg-hidpi" |
"lazy-bg-hidpi" |
data_bg_multi |
The name of the data attribute containing the value of multiple background-image to load lazily, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-bg-multi" , just pass "bg-multi" . The attribute value must be a valid value for background-image , including the url() part of the CSS instruction. |
"bg-multi" |
"lazy-bg-multi" |
data_bg_multi_hidpi |
The name of the data attribute containing the value of multiple background-image to load lazily on HiDPI screens, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-bg-multi-hidpi" , just pass "bg-multi-hidpi" . The attribute value must be a valid value for background-image , including the url() part of the CSS instruction. |
"bg-multi-hidpi" |
"lazy-bg-multi-hidpi" |
data_poster |
The name of the data attribute containing the value of poster to load lazily, excluding the "data-" part. E.g. if your data attribute is named "data-poster" , just pass "poster" . |
"poster" |
"lazy-poster" |
class_applied |
The class applied to the multiple background elements after the multiple background was applied | "applied" |
"lazy-applied" |
class_loading |
The class applied to the elements while the loading is in progress. | "loading" |
"lazy-loading" |
class_loaded |
The class applied to the elements when the loading is complete. | "loaded" |
"lazy-loaded" |
class_error |
The class applied to the elements when the element causes an error. | "error" |
"lazy-error" |
cancel_on_exit |
A boolean that defines whether or not to cancel the download of the images that exit the viewport while they are still loading, eventually restoring the original attributes. It applies only to images so to the img (and picture ) tags, so it doesn't apply to background images, iframe s nor video s. |
false |
true |
load_delay |
The time (in milliseconds) each image needs to stay inside the viewport before its loading begins. | 0 |
300 |
auto_unobserve |
A boolean that defines whether or not to automatically unobserve elements that was already revealed | true |
false |
callback_enter |
A callback function which is called whenever an element enters the viewport. Arguments: DOM element, intersection observer entry, lazyload instance. | null |
(el)=>{console.log("Entered", el)} |
callback_exit |
A callback function which is called whenever an element exits the viewport. Arguments: DOM element, intersection observer entry, lazyload instance. | null |
(el)=>{console.log("Exited", el)} |
callback_loading |
A callback function which is called whenever an element starts loading. Arguments: DOM element, lazyload instance. | null |
(el)=>{console.log("Loading", el)} |
callback_reveal |
⚠ DEPRECATED: use callback_loading instead. A callback function which is called whenever an element starts loading. Arguments: DOM element, lazyload instance. |
null |
(el)=>{console.log("Loading", el)} |
callback_cancel |
A callback function which is called whenever an element loading is canceled while loading, as for cancel_on_exit: true . |
null |
(el)=>{console.log("Cancelled", el)} |
callback_loaded |
A callback function which is called whenever an element finishes loading. Note that, in version older than 11.0.0, this option went under the name callback_load . Arguments: DOM element, lazyload instance. |
null |
(el)=>{console.log("Loaded", el)} |
callback_error |
A callback function which is called whenever an element triggers an error. Arguments: DOM element, lazyload instance. | null |
(el)=>{console.log("Error", el)} |
callback_applied |
A callback function which is called whenever a multiple background element starts loading. Arguments: DOM element, lazyload instance. | null |
(el)=>{console.log("Applied", el)} |
callback_finish |
A callback function which is called when there are no more elements to load and all elements have been downloaded. Arguments: lazyload instance. | null |
()=>{console.log("Finish")} |
use_native |
This boolean sets whether or not to use native lazy loading to do hybrid lazy loading. On browsers that support it, LazyLoad will set the loading="lazy" attribute on images and iframes, and delegate their loading to the browser. |
false |
true |
Instance methods
You can call the following methods on any instance of LazyLoad.
Method name | Effect | Use case |
---|---|---|
update() |
Make LazyLoad to re-check the DOM for elements_selector elements inside its container . |
Update LazyLoad after you added or removed DOM elements to the page. |
loadAll() |
Loads all the lazy images right away, no matter if they are inside or outside the viewport. | To load all the remaining elements in advance |
load(element) |
⚠ DEPRECATED, use the static method instead. Immediately loads any lazy element , even if it isn't selectable by the elements_selector option. |
To load an element at mouseover or any other event different than "entering the viewport" |
destroy() |
Destroys the instance, unsetting instance variables and removing listeners. | Free up some memory. Especially useful for Single Page Applications. |
resetElementStatus(element) |
Resets the internal status of the given element . |
To tell LazyLoad to consider this element again, for example if you changed the data-src attribute after the previous data-src was loaded, call this method, then call update() . |
Static methods
You can call the following static methods on the LazyLoad class itself (e.g. LazyLoad.load(element, settings)
).
Method name | Effect | Use case |
---|---|---|
load(element, settings) |
Immediately loads the lazy element . You can pass your custom options in the settings parameter. Note that the elements_selector option has no effect, since you are passing the element as a parameter. Also note that this method has effect only once on a specific element . |
To load an element at mouseover or at any other event different than "entering the viewport" |
You can use the following properties on any instance of LazyLoad.
Property name | Value |
---|---|
loadingCount |
The number of elements that are currently downloading from the network (limitedly to the ones managed by the instance of LazyLoad). This is particularly useful to understand whether or not is safe to destroy this instance of LazyLoad. |
toLoadCount |
The number of elements that haven't been lazyloaded yet (limitedly to the ones managed by the instance of LazyLoad) |
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As LazyLoad doesn't rely on jQuery, you can use it in web applications using Angular, React or Vue.js without the need to include jQuery.
Instead of listening to the scroll
and resize
events, LazyLoad uses the Intersection Observer API which is a new, blazing fast method to detect if an element is inside the browser viewport. Your users will see the difference in slow and even in fast devices or computers.
LazyLoad doesn't hide your images from search engines, even if you don't specify any initial src
for your image.
If your users lose the internet connection causing errors on images loading, this script tries and loads those images again when the connection is restored.
Activating the cancel_on_exit
option, you can tell LazyLoad to optimize for slow connection by cancelling the download of images when they exit the viewport.
LazyLoad supports responsive images, both via the srcset
& sizes
attributes and via the picture
tag.
LazyLoad supports single and multiple lazy background images, with standard resolution or HiDPI (retina) displays.
Legacy browsers support is from IE 9 up. This script is tested in every browser before every release using BrowserStack live, thanks to the BrowserStack Open Source initiative.
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