Imager.js is an alternative solution to the issue of how to handle responsive image loading, created by developers at BBC News.
npm install imager.js> Imager.js is an alternative solution to the issue of how to handle responsive image loading, created by developers at BBC News.
There are many responsive image solutions in the wild: srcset, src-n, PictureFill and so on. They are either
verbose or hard to debug (and to maintain/integrate). Some of them don't deal well with pixel density
and suffer from double asset payload (meaning you end up downloading assets unnecessarily).
We wanted something simple, which works and which is fast as well as network friendly (only download what you need, when you need it).
Imager implements the BBC Responsive News technique which incorporates:
- loading any image once
- loading the most suitable sized image
Imager runs through the following workflow:
1. lookup placeholder elements
2. replace placeholders with transparent images
3. update src attribute for each image and assign the best quality/size ratio URL
Finally, it will lazy load images to speed up page load time even further.
Imager is tested against the following mobile and desktop browsers:
- Chrome 33
- Firefox 22
- Opera 12.15
- Edge 12
- Internet Explorer 8, 9, 10 and 11
- Safari 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9
- Mobile Safari 4, 5, 6 and 7
- Android 2, 3 and 4
npm | bower | old school
-------------------------------|----------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------npm install --save imager.js | bower install --save imager.js | download zip file
``html
`
This will result in the following HTML output:
`html
`
260 has been elected as the best available width (as it is the closest upper size relative to 240 pixels).
Let's say we have generated 4 sizes of images (200, 260, 320 and 600)1
in 3 different pixel ratio flavours (, 1.3 and 2):
`html
`
The img[src] will be computed as following (according to the reported window.devicePixelRatio value by the device):
- http://example.com/assets/260/imgr.png if no pixel ratio is detected, or advertised as 1http://example.com/assets/260/imgr-2x.png
- if pixel ratio is advertised as 2 (or any value greater than 2)http://example.com/assets/260/imgr-1.3x.png
- if pixel ratio is advertised as 1.3
Head to this device pixel density test resource to learn more about the available pixel ratio for your device.
Imager has the ability to replace {width} with a non-numeric value if youwidthInterpolator
provide the option, which is a function that returns the
string to be injected into the image URL for a given width. This feature allows you to use a human readable name or integrate with third-party image providers.
`html
`
The img[src] will be computed as http://example.com/assets/imgr-260x130.png instead of http://example.com/assets/imgr-260.png.
Alternatively you can define availableWidths as an Object where the key is the width, and the value is the string to be injected into the image URL.
`html
`
The img[src] will be computed as http://example.com/assets/imgr-small.png instead of http://example.com/assets/imgr-260.png.
You might want to generate HiDPI responsive images. But what if you also include images from another provider which
serves a totally different set of sizes, without pixel ratio?
Here is an example to serve your own images alongside Flickr images.
`html
`
This will result in the following HTML output:
`html`

You might want to pass a NodeList or an array of placeholder elements as the first argument rather than a class selector.
`html
`
This will result in the following HTML output:
`html`
Browse Imager public APIs and options – versioned alongside the source code of the project:
- HTML options
- JavaScript options
- JavaScript API
Additional and fully working examples lie in the demos folder.
- BBC News
- BBC Sport
- The Guardian
- x-imager Web Component
- Imager.jsx React Component
This is an experiment in offering developers an interim solution to responsive images based on the ImageEnhancer concept researched and developed by the team at BBC News.
At present, support for srcset and PictureFill are not widespread and the polyfills for these solutions also come with a number of drawbacks.
Mark McDonnell (@integralist) documented the process and rewrote the original code so it could be evolved and improved with the help of the open-source community.
The goal of this project is to automate the process with the help of the Grunt JavaScript task runner (potentially via grunt-responsive-images` for image generation based on a source directory).
Much of this work can be repurposed to work with a more standards-based approach once support improves in modern browsers.
For the purposes of maintaining a distinguishment between the ImageEnhancer concept built by BBC News and this project, we're calling it Imager.js
Read more on BBC Responsive News blog.
- Mark McDonnell
- Tom Maslen
- Thomas Parisot
- Addy Osmani
> Copyright 2015 British Broadcasting Corporation
>
> Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
>
> http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
>
> Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.