How to Lazy Load div background images

2019-03-08 00:50发布

问题:

As many of you know it is widely used to lazy load images.

Now i want to use this as lazy load div background images.

How can i do that ?

I am currently able to use http://www.appelsiini.net/projects/lazyload that plugin

So i need to modify it in a way that it will work with div backgrounds

Need help. Thank you.

The below part i suppose lazy loads images

$self.one("appear", function() {
    if (!this.loaded) {
        if (settings.appear) {
            var elements_left = elements.length;
            settings.appear.call(self, elements_left, settings);
        }
        $("<img />")
            .bind("load", function() {
                $self
                    .hide()
                    .attr("src", $self.data(settings.data_attribute))
                    [settings.effect](settings.effect_speed);
                self.loaded = true;

                /* Remove image from array so it is not looped next time. */
                var temp = $.grep(elements, function(element) {
                    return !element.loaded;
                });
                elements = $(temp);

                if (settings.load) {
                    var elements_left = elements.length;
                    settings.load.call(self, elements_left, settings);
                }
            })
            .attr("src", $self.data(settings.data_attribute));
    }
});

Jquery plugin lazy load

回答1:

First you need to think off when you want to swap. For example you could switch everytime when its a div tag thats loaded. In my example i just used a extra data field "background" and whenever its set the image is applied as a background image.

Then you just have to load the Data with the created image tag. And not overwrite the img tag instead apply a css background image.

Here is a example of the code change:

if (settings.appear) {
    var elements_left = elements.length;
    settings.appear.call(self, elements_left, settings);
}
var loadImgUri;
if($self.data("background"))
    loadImgUri = $self.data("background");
else
    loadImgUri  = $self.data(settings.data_attribute);

$("<img />")
    .bind("load", function() {
        $self
            .hide();
        if($self.data("background")){
            $self.css('backgroundImage', 'url('+$self.data("background")+')');
        }else
            $self.attr("src", $self.data(settings.data_attribute))

        $self[settings.effect](settings.effect_speed);

        self.loaded = true;

        /* Remove image from array so it is not looped next time. */
        var temp = $.grep(elements, function(element) {
            return !element.loaded;
        });
        elements = $(temp);

        if (settings.load) {
            var elements_left = elements.length;
            settings.load.call(self, elements_left, settings);
        }
    })
    .attr("src", loadImgUri );
}

the loading stays the same

$("#divToLoad").lazyload();

and in this example you need to modify the html code like this:

<div data-background="http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/9712/orionfull_jcc_big.jpg" id="divToLoad" />​

but it would also work if you change the switch to div tags and then you you could work with the "data-original" attribute.

Here's an fiddle example: http://jsfiddle.net/dtm3k/1/



回答2:

I do it like this:

<div class="lazyload" style="width: 1000px; height: 600px" data-src="%s">
    <img class="spinner" src="spinner.gif"/>
</div>

and load with

$(window).load(function(){

    $('.lazyload').each(function() {

        var lazy = $(this);
        var src = lazy.attr('data-src');

        $('<img>').attr('src', src).load(function(){
            lazy.find('img.spinner').remove();
            lazy.css('background-image', 'url("'+src+'")');
        });

    });

});


回答3:

I've found this on the plugin's official site:

<div class="lazy" data-original="img/bmw_m1_hood.jpg" style="background-image: url('img/grey.gif'); width: 765px; height: 574px;"></div>

$("div.lazy").lazyload({
      effect : "fadeIn"
});

Source: http://www.appelsiini.net/projects/lazyload/enabled_background.html



回答4:

I've created a "lazy load" plugin which might help. Here is the a possible way to get the job done with it in your case:

$('img').lazyloadanything({
    'onLoad': function(e, LLobj) {
        var $img = LLobj.$element;
        var src = $img.attr('data-src');
        $img.css('background-image', 'url("'+src+'")');
    }
});

It is simple like maosmurf's example but still gives you the "lazy load" functionality of event firing when the element comes into view.

https://github.com/shrimpwagon/jquery-lazyloadanything



回答5:

I know it's not related to the image load but here what I did in one of the job interview test.

HTML

<div id="news-feed">Scroll to see News (Newest First)</div>

CSS

article {
   margin-top: 500px;
   opacity: 0;
   border: 2px solid #864488;
   padding: 5px 10px 10px 5px;
   background-image: -webkit-gradient(
   linear,
   left top,
   left bottom,
   color-stop(0, #DCD3E8),
   color-stop(1, #BCA3CC)
   );
   background-image: -o-linear-gradient(bottom, #DCD3E8 0%, #BCA3CC 100%);
   background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(bottom, #DCD3E8 0%, #BCA3CC 100%);
   background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(bottom, #DCD3E8 0%, #BCA3CC 100%);
   background-image: -ms-linear-gradient(bottom, #DCD3E8 0%, #BCA3CC 100%);
   background-image: linear-gradient(to bottom, #DCD3E8 0%, #BCA3CC 100%);
   color: gray;
   font-family: arial;    
}

article h4 {
   font-family: "Times New Roman";
   margin: 5px 1px;
}

.main-news {
   border: 5px double gray;
   padding: 15px;
}

JavaScript

var newsData,
    SortData = '',
    i = 1;

$.getJSON("http://www.stellarbiotechnologies.com/media/press-releases/json", function(data) {

   newsData = data.news;

   function SortByDate(x,y) {
     return ((x.published == y.published) ? 0 : ((x.published < y.published) ? 1 : -1 ));
   }

   var sortedNewsData = newsData.sort(SortByDate);

   $.each( sortedNewsData, function( key, val ) {
     SortData += '<article id="article' + i + '"><h4>Published on: ' + val.published + '</h4><div  class="main-news">' + val.title + '</div></article>';
     i++;    
   });

   $('#news-feed').append(SortData);
});

$(window).scroll(function() {

   var $window = $(window),
       wH = $window.height(),
       wS = $window.scrollTop() + 1

   for (var j=0; j<$('article').length;j++) {
      var eT = $('#article' + j ).offset().top,
          eH = $('#article' + j ).outerHeight();

          if (wS > ((eT + eH) - (wH))) {
             $('#article' + j ).animate({'opacity': '1'}, 500);
          }
    }

});

I am sorting the data by Date and then doing lazy load on window scroll function.

I hope it helps :)

Demo



回答6:

I had to deal with this for my responsive website. I have many different backgrounds for the same elements to deal with different screen widths. My solution is very simple, keep all your images scoped to a css selector, like "zoinked".

The logic:

If user scrolls, then load in styles with background images associated with them. Done!

Here's what I wrote in a library I call "zoinked" I dunno why. It just happened ok?

(function(window, document, undefined) {   var Z = function() {
    this.hasScrolled = false;

    if (window.addEventListener) {
      window.addEventListener("scroll", this, false);
    } else {
      this.load();
    }   };
     Z.prototype.handleEvent = function(e) {
    if ($(window).scrollTop() > 2) {
      this.hasScrolled = true;
      window.removeEventListener("scroll", this);
      this.load();
    }   };
     Z.prototype.load = function() {
    $(document.body).addClass("zoinked");   };
     window.Zoink = Z; 
})(window, document);

For the CSS I'll have all my styles like this:

.zoinked #graphic {background-image: url(large.jpg);}

@media(max-width: 480px) {.zoinked #graphic {background-image: url(small.jpg);}}

My technique with this is to load all the images after the top ones as soon as the user starts to scroll. If you wanted more control you could make the "zoinking" more intelligent.



回答7:

Lazy loading images using above mentioned plugins uses conventional way of attaching listener to scroll events or by making use of setInterval and is highly non-performant as each call to getBoundingClientRect() forces the browser to re-layout the entire page and will introduce considerable jank to your website.

Use Lozad.js (just 569 bytes with no dependencies), which uses InteractionObserver to lazy load images performantly.