Blazing fast & beautiful galleries built with React. Try it out now.
- Responsive
- Lazy loading
- Infinite Scroll
- Fully Customizable
- Supports images, videos, and HTML
The best way to get started is by using the Playground. Use the sidebar to configure the gallery layout you need. When you're done, click the Generate Gallery Code
button to get the copy-paste-ready code.
All you need to do after that is specify the images array
for the gallery to process - and your gallery is ready!
Install with npm
npm i -S pro-gallery
or yarn
yarn add pro-gallery
import { ProGallery } from 'pro-gallery';
import 'pro-gallery/dist/statics/main.css';
<ProGallery
domId={domId}
items={items}
options={options}
container={container}
scrollingElement={() => document.getElementById('gallery') || window}
eventsListener={(eName, eData) => console.log({eName, eData})}
/>
To see more options and a real usage example, use the playground source code as reference.
The gallery has A LOT of options, so to make it all easier, we created the Playground. Each option is expandable in the sidebar, and has all the info you need about using it.
Notice that you can click on Generate Gallery Code
anytime to get the code for the gallery layout you created.
For the code you generated to work you need to do just one more thing - provide it with a list of objects, each containing at least an id, dto, and metadata:
const items = [
{ // Image item:
itemId: 'sample-id',
mediaUrl: 'sample-image-url',
metaData: {
type: 'image',
height: 200,
width: 100,
title: 'sample-title',
description: 'sample-description',
focalPoint: [0, 0],
link: {
url: 'http://example.com',
target: '_blank'
},
}
},
{ // Video item:
itemId: 'sample-id',
mediaUrl: 'sample-video-url',
metaData: {
type: 'video',
height: 200,
width: 100,
poster: 'sample-image-url',
title: 'sample-title',
description: 'sample-description',
focalPoint: [0, 0],
link: {
url: 'http://example.com',
target: '_blank'
},
}
},
{ // HTML item:
itemId: 'sample-id',
html: "<div style='width: 300px; height: 200px; background:pink;'>I am a text block</div>",
metadata: {
type: "text",
height: 200,
width: 300,
title: 'sample-title',
description: 'sample-description',
backgroundColor: 'pink'
},
},
{...},
{...}
]
An object containing the width and height (in pixels) of the gallery. These values should change when the container resizes, to allow the gallery to be responsive.
const container = {
width: 1000,
height: 500,
}
The width
and height
values represent the size of the gallery. Thus, the gallery will size inner items to fit exactly into that size. Notice that when infiniteScroll
is enabled, vertical galleries will ignore the height
parameter and horizontal galleries will ignore the width
parameter.
A unique Id for the gallery. Use this if you plan to display multiple galleries on the same page, or when using SSR - to make sure the gallery does not "flicker" in the hydrate phase.
The DOM element inside which the gallery is scrolled (defaults to window
). If the gallery is scrolled inside a different element, pass its dom reference in this property. You can also pass a function that returns that dom element.
notice: this is relevant to vertical galleries only. Horizontal galleries (e.g. slideshow) are handling the scroll themselves.
A callback function that gets called whenever something happens in the gallery. This allows you to react to specific events. The most important events are:
Event Name | Description |
---|---|
GALLERY_CHANGE |
Fired whenever the gallery finished rendering, usually after the props were changed. This event contains the structure data of the gallery. |
ITEM_ACTION_TRIGGERED |
Fired whenever one of the items is clicked or tapped and the gallery cannot handle the action itself (e.g. open an expanded view). |
NEED_MORE_ITEMS |
Fired whenever the gallery is scrolled near its last item. If you are using a pagination server, this is the event that should trigger the next page and re-render the gallery with new items. |
The full list of the gallery events is here.
The Gallery supports custom renderers both for the Hover Element (appears when hovering over an item) and the Info Element (appears below / above an item). To replace the default rendering of these elements, pass a function that will receive the props of an item and that in turn should return a JSX element. For example:
<ProGallery
{...otherProps}
customHoverRenderer={itemProps => <div>Hover #{itemProps.idx}</div>}
customInfoRenderer={itemProps => <div>Info #{itemProps.idx}</div>}
customLoadMoreRenderer={galleryProps => <button>Load More</button>}
/>