ngx skeleton loader

Make beautiful, animated loading skeletons that automatically adapt to your Angular apps

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NGX Skeleton loader

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ngx-skeleton-loader in action

Why skeletons?

If you want to get more details about that, please read “NGX-Skeleton-Loader — States, Animations, Performance, and Accessibility for your Angular App” blog post

The idea of this component is make the process transparent and easier. So the main point is integrate this component with other tooling process, such as:

  • Server-side rendering;
  • Progressive rendering;
  • Any other that you like 😃

It’s totally transparent for you and you can integrate easier in your application, improving your user experience 🎉

Demo

Try out our demos on Stackblitz!

Install

You can get it on NPM installing ngx-skeleton-loader module as a project dependency.

npm install ngx-skeleton-loader --save

Setup

You’ll need to add NgxSkeletonLoaderModule to your application module. So that, the <ngx-skeleton-loader> components will be accessible in your application.

...
import { NgxSkeletonLoaderModule } from 'ngx-skeleton-loader';
...

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    YourAppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    ...
    NgxSkeletonLoaderModule,
    ...
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [YourAppComponent]
})

export class YourAppComponent {}

After that, you can use the ngx-skeleton-loader components in your templates, passing the configuration data into the component itself.

  • ngx-skeleton-loader: Handle the skeleton animation and the skeleton styles of your app;
<div class="item">
  <ngx-skeleton-loader count="5" appearance="circle" />
</div>

Using NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot()

Also, you can import the module in your app by calling NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot() when adding it. So it will be available across your Angular application.

Importing the module this way also allows you to globally configure the default values for the ngx-skeleton-loader components in your application, in case you need some different default values for your app.

...
import { NgxSkeletonLoaderModule } from 'ngx-skeleton-loader';
...

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    YourAppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    ...
    NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot({ animation: 'pulse', loadingText: 'This item is actually loading...' }),
    ...
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [YourAppComponent]
})

export class YourAppComponent {}

<div class="item">
  <ngx-skeleton-loader count="5" appearance="circle" />
  <!-- above line will produce the rendering of 5 circles with the pulse animation and the aria-valuetext attribute set with "This item is actually loading..." -->
</div>

Extending theme via NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot()

By default when using NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot({ theme: /* ...list of CSS atributes */} }) the application is using this value as source of truth, overriding any local theming passed to <ngx-skeleton-loader> component via [theme] input. Check these steps in case you need to change this behaviour in your app

This method is also accepting the option of having a global theme and local theme inputs. You can enable it by passing NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot({ theme: { extendsFromRoot: true, /* ...list of CSS atributes */} }) in your module. Quite simple, right? 😄

By using that configuration in your application, you should also be aware that:

  • By default, every <ngx-skeleton-loader> component will use theme coming from NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot() as the source of truth
  • If there’s any CSS attribute on the component locally which overrides the CSS spec, it combines both themes, but overriding global CSS attributes in favor of local ones.

As an example:

...
import { NgxSkeletonLoaderModule } from 'ngx-skeleton-loader';
...

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    YourAppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    ...
    NgxSkeletonLoaderModule.forRoot({
      theme: {
        // Enabliong theme combination
        extendsFromRoot: true,
        // ... list of CSS theme attributes
        height: '30px',
      },
    }),
    ...
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [YourAppComponent]
})

export class YourAppComponent {}

<div class="item">
  <ngx-skeleton-loader />
  <!-- above line will produce a skeleton component using `height: 30px;`" -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader [theme]="{background: 'blue'}" />
  <!-- above line will produce a skeleton component using `height: 30px; background: blue;`" -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader [theme]="{height: '50px', background: 'red'}" />
  <!-- above line will produce a skeleton component using `height: 50px; background: red;`" -->
</div>

Angular 17+ Deferrable Views example

<div class="item">
  @defer {
    <my-item-view />
  } @placeholder (minimum 1000ms) {
    <ngx-skeleton-loader />
  }
</div>

WAI-ARIA values

  • loadingText - default Loading...: attribute that defines the text value for aria-valuetext attribute. Defaults to “Loading…”
  • aria-label - default loading: you can add ariaLabel as input of the component to set a different value.

Appearance

You can also define which appearance want to use in your skeleton loader by passing the options in your component via [appearance] attribute.

Options

  • '' - default: it will use it '' as appearance. At the end, it will render like a line;
  • line: it will render like a line. This is the same behavior as passing an empty string;
  • circle: it will use circle as appearance. Great for avatar skeletons, for example 😃;
  • custom-content: it will NOT add any appearance. Great for custom content, such as SVG, internal components and such;

Animations

You can also define which CSS animation you want to use - even not use any, if it’s the case - in your skeleton loader by passing the options in your component via [animation] attribute.

Options

  • "false" (as string): it will disable the animation;
  • false (as boolean): it will disable the animation. Animation will receive false as string when attribute field it’s not using binding. Component now can receive false (boolean), “false” (string), or any other animation type via binding;
  • progress - default: it will use it progress as animation;
  • progress-dark: it will use it progress-dark as animation. Recommended if your color schema is darken;
  • pulse: it will use pulse as animation;

progress is the default animation, used as the single one previously. If you don’t pass the animation attribute, it defaults to progress.

<!--
If you need to change all the background wrapper
you need to apply the style changes on the 
`ngx-skeleton-loader` component wrapper
-->
<div class="item">
  <!-- Disables the animation -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader animation="false" />
  <!-- Disables the animation, but receiving boolean value from binding -->
  <!-- Via binding it can receive `false` (boolean), "false" (string), or any other animation type -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader [animation]="classAttributeWithBooleanFalseValue" />
  <!-- Uses `progress` as animation -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader animation="progress" />
  <ngx-skeleton-loader />
  <!-- Uses `pulse` as animation -->
  <ngx-skeleton-loader animation="pulse" />
</div>

You can check the code details in the Stackblitz Live Demo Link

Theming

You can also define different styles for the skeleton loader by passing an object with the css styles - in dashed case - into the component via [theme] attribute.

<!--
If you need to change all the background wrapper
you need to apply the style changes on the 
`ngx-skeleton-loader` component wrapper
-->

<div style="background: #FF0001; padding: 10px;">
  <ngx-skeleton-loader
    count="5"
    [theme]="{ 
      'border-radius': '5px',
      height: '50px',
      'background-color': '#992929',
      border: '1px solid white'
    }"
  />
</div>

The [theme] attribute now accepts the same configuration as ngStyle as well. That means you can manage to use like you’re doing with the built-in directive, having a pleasure and beautiful experience

<!--
Note that we are using a combination of styles and ngStyle inside theme object,
having `height.px` receiving a number and `background-color` receiving a HEX Color
-->
<div style="background: #FF0001; padding: 10px;">
  <ngx-skeleton-loader
    count="5"
    [theme]="{ 
      'height.px': 50,
      'background-color': '#992929'
    }"
  />
</div>

⚠️ This is here only as a documentation, but it’s not encouraged to be used. Please consider use it with caution ⚠️

Also, you can use CSS to add theme styles into your component. However, there are some implications:

  • You’re using :host in your stylesheet, which means you are aware of any possible problem :host can create for your app at that level since it’s based on :host DOM style scoping
  • You’re adding stylesheet based on <ngx-skeleton-loader> internal classes. It means that class naming changes on module’s side will be breaking changes for your application as well.

As an example, your Component file is like this

import { Component } from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector: 'my-ngx-skeleton-loader-with-theming',
  templateUrl: './my-ngx-skeleton-loader-with-theming.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./my-ngx-skeleton-loader-with-theming.component.css'],
})
export class MyNGXSkeletonLoaderWithThemingComponent {
  /* ... code goes here*/
}

And your component HTML code is

<!--
file: my-ngx-skeleton-loader-with-theming.component.html

As an example, it's not using themes via [theme] attributes.
-->

<ngx-skeleton-loader count="5" animation="pulse" />

You can apply theme changes in our stylesheet. At the end it will be

/* file: `my-ngx-skeleton-loader-with-theming.component.css`
 *
 * You can find more details about `:host` at
 * Angular Component Style Docs https://angular.io/guide/component-styles#host
 */
:host >>> ngx-skeleton-loader .skeleton-loader {
  border-radius: 5px;
  height: 50px;
  background-color: #992929;
  border: 1px solid white;
}

You should change the styles on the skeleton wrapper element in case you need to change the background color. You can check the code details in the Stackblitz Live Demo Link or check it out a content load simulation in this Stackblitz Live Demo Link

Development

Run demo locally

  1. This project uses Angular CLI as base. That means you just need to run npm start and access the link http://localhost:4200 in your browser

Run tests

  1. Run npm test for run tests. In case you want to test using watch, please use npm run tdd

Publish

this project is using np package to publish, which makes things straightforward. EX: npx np <patch|minor|major> --no-yarn --no-cleanup --contents=dist/ngx-skeleton-loader

For more details, please check np package on npmjs.com

Contribute

For any type of contribution, please follow the instructions in CONTRIBUTING.md and read CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md files.

Author

Wilson Mendes (willmendesneto)