react-finite-loader

0.1.0 • Public • Published

React Finite Loader

Finite loader components for React.

React finite loader provides loader components for loading resources where the size of the resource is known. For example downloading a file.

React finite loader provides a set of loading UI components as well as a set of container components to interface with resource loading methods such as XMLHttpRequest objects.

Contents


  1. Getting Started
  2. UI Components
  3. API Documentation

Getting Started


Install and save as a dependency. npm install --save react-finite-loader

Using the XMLHttpRequest container

In the example below we make use of the provided XmlHttpRequestContainer component which accepts an XMLHttpRequest instance and a loader type as a child for the UI.

In this instance we simply start the XMLHttpRequest once the component has been loaded. For our UI component (Bar) we have passed some styling attributes. Styling can be handled within the component via Javascript or externally via CSS, see API documentation for more details.

import React from 'react'
import { XmlHttpRequestContainer, Bar } from 'react-finite-loader'

export default class ResourceDownloader extends React.Component {
  componentDidMount () {
    const { xmlHttpRequest, url } = this.props
    xmlHttpRequest.open('GET', url)
    xmlHttpRequest.send()
  }

  render () {
    const { xmlHttpRequest } = this.props
    return (
      <XmlHttpRequestContainer xmlHttpRequest={xmlHttpRequest}>
        <Bar
          style={{
            width: '100%',
            height: '20px',
            loadedColor: '#2c69cc',
            unloadedColor: '#9cbbed'
          }}
        />
      </XmlHttpRequestContainer>
    )
  }
}

In this example our ResourceDownloader takes two props; xmlHttpRequest and url. Where xmlHttpRequest is our XMLHttpRequest instance and url is the URL location of the resource we are running our GET request against.

Using the ReactFiniteLoader component

If there are no suitable container components you can use the ReactFiniteLoader component directly, this is the component used by the container components to interface with the various resource loading methods.

In this example we imitate a resource loading in by setting a randomly incrementing loading value at random intervals.

import React from 'react'
import { ReactFiniteLoader, Bar } from 'react-finite-loader'

export default class ResourceDownloader extends React.Component {
  constructor (props) {
    super(props)
    this.state = { value: 0 }
    this.incrementValue = this.incrementValue.bind(this)
    this.getRand = this.getRand.bind(this)
  }

  incrementValue () {
    setTimeout(() => {
      const value = this.state.value + this.getRand(1, 12)
      if (this.state.value >= 100) {
        this.setState({ value: 100 })
      } else {
        this.setState({ value })
        this.incrementValue()
      }
    }, this.getRand(600, 1800))
  }

  componentDidMount () {
    this.incrementValue()
  }

  getRand (min, max) {
    return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min)) + min
  }

  render () {
    const { value } = this.state
    return (
      <ReactFiniteLoader value={value}>
        <Bar
          style={{
            width: '100%',
            height: '20px',
            loadedColor: '#2c69cc',
            unloadedColor: '#9cbbed'
          }}
        />
      </ReactFiniteLoader>
    )
  }
}

We use the same UI component as in the previous example, but this time instead of using the XmlHttpRequestContainer component we are using the ReactFiniteLoader component instead. This allows us to control the progress. In this example we only pass a value prop, by default our inital and final values are 0 and 100 respectively. See the API docs for more details.

Once our component has mounted we start our progress value incrementer which recursively increments our value until it has reached 100 at random time intervals and random increments.

UI Components

As well as being able to use the bundled loader UI components you can also create your own custom UI components.

All UI components receive a progressPercentage prop which is the progress percentage value between 0% and 100% inclusive. Any additional props are component specific. The progressPercentage prop is handled by the ReactFiniteLoader component.

Therefore to create a custom UI loader component all you need to do is create a component which accepts a progressPercentage prop and handle the value on progressPercentage accordingly.

See the API documentation for further detail on the bundled UI components.

API Documentation


  1. Container Components
  2. UI Loader Components

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Install

npm i react-finite-loader

Weekly Downloads

8

Version

0.1.0

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • lewnelson