An AngularJS 1 directive to work with David Desandro's Masonry.
-
Install via either bower or npm:
bower install --save angular-masonry
npm install --save angular-masonry
-
Add
wu.masonry
to your application's module dependencies. -
Include dependencies in your HTML.
<script src="bower_components/ev-emitter/ev-emitter.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/desandro-matches-selector/matches-selector.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/fizzy-ui-utils/utils.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/get-size/get-size.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/outlayer/item.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/outlayer/outlayer.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/masonry/masonry.js"></script> <!-- optional --> <script src="bower_components/imagesloaded/imagesloaded.js"></script> <!-- /optional --> <script src="bower_components/angular/angular.js"></script> <script src="bower_components/angular-masonry/angular-masonry.js"></script>
-
Use the
masonry
directive.
See the homepage for a live example.
<div masonry load-images="true">
<div class="masonry-brick" ng-repeat="brick in bricks">
<img ng-src="{{ brick.src }}" alt="A masonry brick">
</div>
</div>
You have to include the masonry
attribute on the element holding the bricks.
The bricks are registered at the directive through the masonry-brick
CSS
classname.
The directive optionally uses imagesloaded
to determine when all images within the masonry-brick
have been loaded and adds
the loaded
CSS class to the element, so you can add custom styles and
prevent ghosting effects.
(Default: .masonry-brick
)
You can specify a different item
selector through the
item-selector
attribute. You still need to use masonry-brick
either as class
name or element attribute on sub-elements in order to register it to the
directive.
Example:
<masonry item-selector=".mybrick">
<div masonry-brick class="mybrick">Unicorns</div>
<div masonry-brick class="mybrick">Sparkles</div>
</masonry>
The column-width
attribute allows you to override the the width of a column
of a horizontal grid. If
not set, Masonry will use the outer width of the first element.
Example:
<masonry column-width="200">
<div class="masonry-brick">This will be 200px wide max.</div>
</masonry>
The preserve-order
attributes disables the imagesLoaded
logic and will
instead display bricks by the order in the DOM instead of by the time they are
loaded. Be aware that this can lead to visual glitches if the size of the
elements isn't set at the time they are inserted.
Example:
<masonry preserve-order>
<div class="masonry-brick"><img src="..." alt="Will always be shown 1st"></div>
<div class="masonry-brick"><img src="..." alt="Will always be shown 2nd"></div>
</masonry>
Allows usage of imagesLoaded
plugin. Defaults to false
.
Example:
<masonry load-images="true">
<div class="masonry-brick"><img src="/your/image_1.jpg" alt="image"/></div>
<div class="masonry-brick"><img src="/your/image_2.jpg" alt="image"/></div>
</masonry>
The reload-on-show
attribute triggers a reload when the masonry element (or an
ancestor element) is shown after being hidden, useful when using ng-show
or
ng-hide
. Without this if the viewport is resized while the masonry element is
hidden it may not render properly when shown again.
Example:
<masonry reload-on-show ng-show="showList">
<div class="masonry-brick">...</div>
<div class="masonry-brick">...</div>
</masonry>
When showList
changes from falsey to truthy ctrl.reload
will be called.
The reload-on-resize
attribute triggers a reload when the masonry element changes
its width, useful when only the parent element is resized (and not the window) and
you want the elements to be rearranged. Without this if the parent is resized then
some blank space may be left on the sides.
Example:
<masonry reload-on-resize>
<div class="masonry-brick">...</div>
<div class="masonry-brick">...</div>
</masonry>
You can provide additional options
as expression either as masonry
or masonry-options
attribute.
Example:
<masonry masonry-options="{ transitionDuration: '0.4s' }">
</masonry>
Equivalent to:
<div masonry="{ transitionDuration: '0.4s' }">
</div>
Bricks are appended by default. This behavior can be specified for each brick by
providing the prepend
attribute.
Example:
<div masonry>
<div class="masonry-brick" prepend="isPrepended()">...</div>
</div>
The directive is based on a StackOverflow question answered by James Sharp.
Please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md before opening issues or pull requests.
MIT