#html5Preloader
With the growing use of HTML5 and it taking over the browser game scene, developers need an easy API to preload their resources on to the browser. html5-preloader aims to offer this, and in a compact, yet customizable way. html5-preloader supports almost all of the data types out there, from mp4 to XML, and with flexible fallback support.
- It's lightweight, easy to use and flexible.
- You won't have to worry about browser differencies on file loading, the library does it for you.
- No more errors because some load wasn't finished yet.
- Supports all the major resources: audio, image, video, document/xml
- Versatile input syntax, you can add files just with
addFiles('file1.abc', 'file2.abc', ...)
syntax or you can use'myIdentifier*:file1.abc'
to specify an identifier for the file (for fetching the file afterwards, if necessary) and you can combine these with the flexible alternate filepath syntax, ie.'myFile*:file1.abc||alternate1.abc||alternate2.abc'
to provide fallbacks where necessary. - Supports all the major MODERN browsers: Chrome/Chromium 6+, IE9+, Opera 10.6+, FF 3.6+, Safari 5+ (if you're not designing a web application that would require one of these browsers, you won't trigger code that isn't supported by the unmentioned browsers anyway, so basically this library supports all browsers)
- Advanced error handling and support for custom error handling via a single
error
event. - Easily detect when all files have been loaded with an event titled
finish
- Use loaded files via
.getFile(identifier)
function. You can fetch all loaded files by omitting an identifier. - Graphical feedback extensions are easy to build, downloads include one such extension that draws a basic rotating loader, on the specified 2D context of a canvas.
- Secure: Minimum conflict with other js libraries. Robust coding makes sure all data remains unaltered by third parties (provided you make your html5Preloader instance a private variable as well)
First, include the script to your page (you can download the latest stable version from the downloads). Next, you need to create an instance of the html5-preloader:
var myLoader = html5Preloader();
Now you should probably add some files to load, that's pretty straightforward to do:
// You can call the .addFiles() function
// To shorten load times, you should always offer the .mp3 as a last alternative.
myLoader.addFiles('file1', 'mysound*:sound.ogg||sound.mp3');
// Or you can always add the files on construct, like this:
myLoader = html5Preloader('file1', 'mysound*:sound.ogg||sound.mp3');
Maybe you want to know when all the files have been preloaded, and are available to use and then log that.
myLoader.on('finish', function(){ console.log('All assets loaded.'); });
Or maybe we'd want to log all errors that occur.
myLoader.on('error', function(e){ console.error(e); });
html5Preloader is licensed under MIT License.
- Deprecated old event model in favor of an EventEmitter style one. (
.onfinish = a;
becomes.on('finish', a);
). - All downloads are now run in parallel for a speedup for most cases.
- Deprecated
.nowLoading
(because of above)