ImageKit Vue.js SDK allows you to use real-time image resizing, optimization, and file uploading in the client-side.
npm install --save imagekitio-vue
or
yarn add imagekitio-vue
Register it as a plugin to globally install all components.
import ImageKit from "imagekitio-vue"
Vue.use(ImageKit, {
urlEndpoint: "your_url_endpoint", // Required. Default URL-endpoint is https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id
publicKey: "your_public_api_key", // optional
authenticationEndpoint: "https://www.your-server.com/auth" // optional
// transformationPosition: "path" // optional
})
urlEndpoint
is required to use the SDK. You can get URL-endpoint from your ImageKit dashboard - https://imagekit.io/dashboard#url-endpoints.
publicKey
and authenticationEndpoint
parameters are required if you want to use the SDK for client-side file upload. You can get these parameters from the developer section in your ImageKit dashboard - https://imagekit.io/dashboard#developers.
transformationPosition
is optional. The default value for this parameter is path
. Acceptable values are path
& query
Note: Do not include your Private Key in any client-side code, including this SDK or its initialization. If you pass the privateKey
parameter while initializing this SDK, it throws an error
Or, import components individually.
import { IKImage, IKContext, IKUpload } from "imagekitio-vue"
export default {
components: {
IKImage,
IKContext,
IKUpload
}
}
import ImageKit from "imagekitio-vue"
Vue.use(ImageKit, {
urlEndpoint: "your_url_endpoint", // Required. Default URL-endpoint is https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id
publicKey: "your_public_api_key", // optional
authenticationEndpoint: "https://www.your-server.com/auth" // optional
})
// Rendering image using a relative file path
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
/>
// Image resizing
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}]"
/>
// Using chained transformation
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}, {rotation:90}]"
/>
// Imgae from absolute file path
<ik-image
src="https://custom-domain.com/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}, {rotation:90}]"
/>
// Lazy loading
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400},{rotation:90}]"
loading="lazy"
height="300"
width="400"
/>
// Low-quality blurred image placeholder of original image
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:lqip="{active:true}"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400},{rotation:90}]"
loading="lazy"
height="300"
width="400"
/>
// Controlling quality and blur value of placeholder image
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:lqip="{active:true, quality:30, blur: 5}" // default values are quality=20 and blur=6
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400},{rotation:90}]"
loading="lazy"
height="300"
width="400"
/>
// File upload
<ik-upload
:tags="['tag1','tag2']"
:responseFields="['tags']"
:onError="onError"
:onSuccess="onSuccess"
:useUniqueFileName=true
:isPrivateFile=false
customCoordinates="10,10,100,100"
/>
The fastest way to get started is by running the demo application in samples/sample-app folder as the README.md.
This SDK provides 3 global components, when registered as a plugin:
ik-image
for image resizing. The output is a<img>
tag.ik-upload
for file uploading. The output is a<input type="file">
tag.ik-context
for definingurlEndpoint
,publicKey
andauthenticationEndpoint
to all children elements.
If you want to do anything custom, access the ImageKit core JS SDK using IKCore
module. For example:
import { IKCore } from "imagekitio-vue"
// Generate image URL
var imagekit = new ImageKit({
publicKey: "your_public_api_key",
urlEndpoint: "https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id",
authenticationEndpoint: "http://www.yourserver.com/auth",
});
//https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/endpoint/tr:h-300,w-400/default-image.jpg
var imageURL = imagekit.url({
path: "/default-image.jpg",
urlEndpoint: "https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/endpoint/",
transformation: [{
"height": "300",
"width": "400"
}]
});
ik-image
components accept the following props:
Prop | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
urlEndpoint | String | Optional. The base URL to be appended before the path of the image. If not specified, the URL-endpoint specified at the time of SDK initialization is used. For example, https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/endpoint/ |
path | String | Conditional. This is the path at which the image exists. For example, /path/to/image.jpg . Either the path or src parameter needs to be specified for URL generation. |
src | String | Conditional. This is the complete URL of an image already mapped to ImageKit. For example, https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/endpoint/path/to/image.jpg . Either the path or src parameter needs to be specified for URL generation. |
transformation | Array of objects | Optional. An array of objects specifying the transformation to be applied in the URL. The transformation name and the value should be specified as a key-value pair in the object. See list of different tranformations. Different steps of a chained transformation can be specified as the array's different objects. The complete list of supported transformations in the SDK and some examples of using them are given later. If you use a transformation name that is not specified in the SDK, it gets applied as it is in the URL. |
transformationPostion | String | Optional. The default value is path that places the transformation string as a path parameter in the URL. It can also be specified as query which adds the transformation string as the query parameter tr in the URL. If you use src parameter to create the URL, then the transformation string is always added as a query parameter. |
queryParameters | Object | Optional. These are the other query parameters that you want to add to the final URL. These can be any query parameters and not necessarily related to ImageKit. Especially useful if you want to add some versioning parameter to your URLs. |
loading | String | Optional. Pass lazy to lazy load images |
lqip | Object | Optional. You can use this to show a low-quality blurred placeholder while the original image is being loaded e.g. {active:true, quality: 20, blur: 6 }. The default value of quality is 20 and blur is 6 . |
// Image from related file path with no transformations
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
/>
// Loading imgae from an absolute file path with no transformations
<ik-image
src="https://custom-domain.com/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}, {rotation:90}]"
/>
// Image resizing
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}]"
/>
// Using a new tranformation parameter which is not there in this SDK yet.
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400, custom: 'value'}, {rotation:90}]"
/>
The transformation
prop is an array of objects. Each object can have the following properties. When you specify more than one object, each object is added as a chained transformation. For example:
// It means first resize the image to 400x400 and then rotate 90 degree
transformation = [
{
height: 400,
width: 400
},
{
rotation: 90
}
]
See the complete list of transformations supported in ImageKit here. The SDK gives a name to each transformation parameter e.g. height
for h
and width
for w
parameter. It makes your code more readable. If the property does not match any of the following supported options, it is added as it is.
Expand
Supported Transformation Name | Translates to parameter |
---|---|
height | h |
width | w |
aspectRatio | ar |
quality | q |
crop | c |
cropMode | cm |
x | x |
y | y |
focus | fo |
format | f |
radius | r |
background | bg |
border | b |
rotation | rt |
blur | bl |
named | n |
overlayX | ox |
overlayY | oy |
overlayFocus | ofo |
overlayHeight | oh |
overlayWidth | ow |
overlayImage | oi |
overlayImageTrim | oit |
overlayImageAspectRatio | oiar |
overlayImageBackground | oibg |
overlayImageBorder | oib |
overlayImageDPR | oidpr |
overlayImageQuality | oiq |
overlayImageCropping | oic |
overlayImageTrim | oit |
overlayText | ot |
overlayTextFontSize | ots |
overlayTextFontFamily | otf |
overlayTextColor | otc |
overlayTextTransparency | oa |
overlayAlpha | oa |
overlayTextTypography | ott |
overlayBackground | obg |
overlayTextEncoded | ote |
overlayTextWidth | otw |
overlayTextBackground | otbg |
overlayTextPadding | otp |
overlayTextInnerAlignment | otia |
overlayRadius | or |
progressive | pr |
lossless | lo |
trim | t |
metadata | md |
colorProfile | cp |
defaultImage | di |
dpr | dpr |
effectSharpen | e-sharpen |
effectUSM | e-usm |
effectContrast | e-contrast |
effectGray | e-grayscale |
original | orig |
Chained transforms make it easy to specify the order the transform are applied. For example:
// Using chained transformation. First resize and then rotate image to 90 degree.
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}, {rotation:90}]"
/>
You can lazy load images using the loading
prop. When you use loading="lazy"
, all images that are immediately viewable without scrolling load normally. Those that are far below the device viewport are only fetched when the user scrolls near them.
The SDK uses a fixed threshold based on the effective connection type to ensure that images are loaded early enough so that they have finished loading once the user scrolls near to them.
On fast connections (e.g 4G), the value of threshold is 1250px
and on slower connections (e.g 3G), it is 2500px
.
You should always set the
height
andwidth
of image element to avoid layout shift when lazy-loading images.
Example usage:
// Lazy loading images
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400},{rotation:90}]"
loading="lazy"
height="300"
width="400"
/>
To improve user experience, you can use a low-quality blurred variant of the original image as a placeholder while the original image is being loaded in the background. Once the loading of the original image is finished, the placeholder is replaced with the original image.
// Loading a blurred low quality image placeholder while the original image is being loaded
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:lqip="{active:true}"
/>
By default, the SDK uses the quality:20
and blur:6
. You can change this. For example:
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:lqip="{active:true, quality: 40, blur: 5}"
/>
You have the option to lazy-load the original image only when the user scrolls near them. Until then, only a low-quality placeholder is loaded. This saves a lot of network bandwidth if the user never scrolls further down.
// Loading a blurred low quality image placeholder and lazy-loading original when user scrolls near them
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400},{rotation:90}]"
:lqip="{active:true}"
loading="lazy"
height="300"
width="400"
/>
You can use urlEndpoint
prop in an individual ik-image
to change url for that image. For example:
import ImageKit from "imagekitio-vue"
Vue.use(ImageKit, {
urlEndpoint: "https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id"
})
// Changing urlEndpoint
// https://www.custom-domain.com/tr:w-400,h-300/default-image.jpg
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}]"
urlEndpoint="https://www.custom-domain.com"
/>
// Without urlEndpoint
// https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/tr:w-400,h-300/default-image.jpg
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"
:transformation="[{height:300,width:400}]"
/>
The SDK provides the ik-upload
component to upload files to the ImageKit Media Library.
ik-upload
component accepts the ImageKit Upload API options as props.
Prop | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
fileName | String | Optional. If not specified, the file system name is picked. |
useUniqueFileName | Boolean | Optional. Accepts true of false . The default value is true . Specify whether to use a unique filename for this file or not. |
tags | Array of string | Optional. Set the tags while uploading the file e.g. ["tag1","tag2"] |
folder | String | Optional. The folder path (e.g. /images/folder/ ) in which the file has to be uploaded. If the folder doesn't exist before, a new folder is created. |
isPrivateFile | Boolean | Optional. Accepts true of false . The default value is false . Specify whether to mark the file as private or not. This is only relevant for image type files |
customCoordinates | String | Optional. Define an important area in the image. This is only relevant for image type files. To be passed as a string with the x and y coordinates of the top-left corner, and width and height of the area of interest in format x,y,width,height . For example - 10,10,100,100 |
responseFields | Array of string | Optional. Values of the fields that you want upload API to return in the response. For example, set the value of this field to ["tags", "customCoordinates", "isPrivateFile"] to get value of tags , customCoordinates , and isPrivateFile in the response. |
onSuccess | Function callback | Optional. Called if upload is successfull. The first and only argument is the response JOSN from the upload API |
onError | Function callback | Optional. Called if upload results in an error. The first and only argument is the error received from the upload API |
urlEndpoint | String | Optional. If not specified, the URL-endpoint specified at the time of SDK initialization is used. For example, https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/endpoint/ |
publicKey | String | Optional. If not specified, the publicKey specified at the time of SDK initialization is used. |
authenticationEndpoint | String | Optional. If not specified, the authenticationEndpoint specified at the time of SDK initialization is used. |
Make sure that you have specified
authenticationEndpoint
andpublicKey
during SDK initialization or inik-upload
as a prop. The SDK makes an HTTP GET request to this endpoint and expects a JSON response with three fields i.e.signature
,token
, andexpire
. Learn how to implement authenticationEndpoint on your server. Refer to sample application in this repository for an example implementation.
Sample file upload:
<template>
<ik-upload
:tags="['tag1','tag2']"
:responseFields="['tags']"
:onError="onError"
:onSuccess="onSuccess"
customCoordinates="10,10,100,100"
/>
</template>
<script>
import Vue from 'vue';
import ImageKit from "imagekitio-vue"
Vue.use(ImageKit, {
urlEndpoint: "your_url_endpoint", // Required. Default URL-endpoint is https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id
publicKey: "your_public_api_key", // optional
authenticationEndpoint: "https://www.your-server.com/auth" // optional
})
export default {
name: "app",
components: {},
data() {
return {};
},
methods: {
onError(err) {
console.log("Error");
console.log(err);
},
onSuccess(res) {
console.log("Success");
console.log(res);
}
}
};
</script>
ik-context
component allows you to define configuration parameters that are applied to all children elements.
// Register as plugin
import Vue from 'vue';
import ImageKit from "imagekitio-vue"
Vue.use(ImageKit, {
urlEndpoint: "https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id",
})
// Using global configuration
// https://ik.imagekit.io/your_imagekit_id/default-image.jpg
<ik-image
path="/default-image.jpg"/>
// Defining urlEndpoint in ik-context
<ik-context
urlEndpoint="https://www.custom-domain.com/">
// https://www.custom-domain.com/default-image.jpg
// urlEndpoint is taken from the parent ik-context
<ik-image path="/default-image.jpg"/>
</ik-context >
// Using exported component
<IKContext
:publicKey="your_url_endpoint"
:urlEndpoint="your_public_api_key"
:authenticationEndpoint="https://www.your-server.com/auth"
>
<IKUpload
:tags="['tag3','tag4']"
:responseFields="['tags']"
:onSuccess="onSuccess"
/>
</IKContext>
For any feedback or to report any issues or general implementation support, please reach out to [email protected]
Released under the MIT license.