A fork from [NgxImageViewer](https://github.com/jpilfold/ngx-image-viewer), which is a configurable Angular image viewer component.
npm install lacuna-image-viewerAngular at version 5.x, and we updated it to 9.x (it important to say that it was built with Ivy) and some other packages, such as ng-packagr;
Material as default for the buttons and icons, instead of Font-awesome;
SafeUrl and SafeResourceUrl as source;
allowDrag);
wheelZoom was renamed to allowCtrlWheelZoom as well);
screenfull was causing some errors in runtime, we replaced it by the package angular-bigscreen, which is simpler to use, and, as screenfull, is a wrapper of the HTML5 fullscreen API;
ng-packagr (errors related to private properties that were being used in the template, and also to callbacks with the wrong signature);
javascript
import { ImageViewerModule } from "lacuna-image-viewer";
@NgModule({
//...
imports: [
//...
ImageViewerModule.forRoot()
],
//...
})
`
Then, add the component to your template, providing an array of image URLs. You can also optionally add an index, to indicate which image should be shown first. The default will be the first item in the array.
`html
`
By default, the image viewer will fill its container. If you wish to restrict the size, simply place it within a div, and set the size constraints on the div.
If you want to use the standard icons of LacunaImageViewer, you will also need to install @angular/cdk and @angular/material, and set up your styles file to use Angular Material as well.
`
npm install --save @angular/cdk
npm install --save @angular/material
`
Otherwise, you will need to use the configuration to set different icon classes.
---
Configuration
Configuration can be provided at module level (by passing the object as an argument to forRoot()), or at component level, by passing it to the config input. Any configuration provided at component level will override the one that was passed at module level.
The configuration object is structured as below. All values are optional, and if ommitted, the default value shown below will be used.
`javascript
{
btnClass: 'mat-mini-fab', // The CSS class(es) that will apply to the buttons
zoomFactor: 0.1, // The amount that the scale will be increased by
containerBackgroundColor: '#ccc', // The color to use for the background. This can provided in hex, or rgb(a).
allowCtrlWheelZoom: true, // If true, pressing ctrl and scrolling the mouse wheel will be used to zoom in and out when the cursor is inside the component
allowFullscreen: true, // If true, the fullscreen button will be shown, allowing the user to entr fullscreen mode
allowKeyboardNavigation: true, // If true, the left / right arrow keys can be used for navigation
allowDrag: true, // If true, you will be able to drag the image and move it inside the container
btnIcons: { // The icon classes that will apply to the buttons. By default, font-awesome is used.
zoomIn: 'material-icons zoom-in',
zoomOut: 'material-icons zoom-out',
rotateClockwise: 'material-icons rotate-clockwise',
rotateCounterClockwise: 'material-icons rotate-counterclock',
next: 'material-icons next',
prev: 'material-icons prev',
fullscreen: 'material-icons fullscreen',
},
btnShow: {
zoomIn: true,
zoomOut: true,
rotateClockwise: true,
rotateCounterClockwise: true,
next: true,
prev: true
}
};
`
You can also add custom buttons, as in the example below:
`html
[config]="{customBtns:[{ name: 'link', icon: 'material-icons link' }]}"
(customEvent)="handleEvent($event)">
`
`javascript
handleEvent(event: CustomEvent) {
console.log(${event.name} has been click on img ${event.imageIndex + 1});
switch (event.name) {
case 'print':
console.log('run print logic');
break;
}
}
``