Awesome
<div align="center"> <a href="https://uiball.com/loaders"><img src="https://github.com/GriffinJohnston/uiball-loaders/raw/main/thumbnail.png" alt="U-I Ball Loaders" width="100%" height="auto"></a> </div>🛑 Deprecated
This package has been superceded by the new LDRS project:
Website: https://uiball.com/ldrs
GitHub: https://github.com/GriffinJohnston/ldrs
NPM: https://www.npmjs.com/package/ldrs
LDRS exports HTML custom elements instead of React components, which means it will work with any library or framework, including React. Because of this and other breaking changes (one or two loaders are renamed), LDRS is not a drop-in replacement for @uiball/loaders. It's still easy to use though, and way more flexible.
Loaders
Lightweight loaders & spinners for your next React project.
- 24 Types 🎨 — Unique enough to be interesting; simple enough to use in real-world projects
- Customizable 🖌️ — Set the size, color, line weight and animation speed to match your design
- Tiny 🦐 — Individual loaders are < 1kb gzipped
- No gifs 📷 — Built with HTML and modern CSS. A couple loaders use lightweight SVG as well
- Zero dependencies ⛓️ — Zero worries.
Visit the 🌐 Website to see them all in action.
Built by Griffin Johnston for UI Ball
Installation
NPM
npm install @uiball/loaders
Yarn
yarn add @uiball/loaders
Getting Started
Import individual loader components. Use them wherever you like. The full list can be found on the website.
import { Waveform } from '@uiball/loaders'
export default function PageSection({ isLoading }) {
return (
<div aria-live="polite" aria-busy={isLoading}>
{isLoading && <Waveform />}
</div>
)
}
Tree Shaking
This package is designed to maximize the benefits of tree shaking; so when you use a modern bundler like Webpack, Rollup or Parcel, and import { Orbit } from '@uiball/loaders'
only the tiny code for the Orbit loader ends up in your app (most are less than 1kb).
Platform Support
This is a pure ESM library, so no require()
-ing from CommonJS. It makes use of CSS custom properties (CSS variables) and keyframe animations, which work great in all modern browsers. Internet Explorer is not supported, however.
Next.js versions less than 12 don't transpile ESM modules by default and will throw an error. If you are using Next v11.1, you can add support with an experimental flag. Otherwise you can add support with this package: https://www.npmjs.com/package/next-transpile-modules.
Remix requires an additional step to import pure ESM packages. See https://remix.run/docs/en/v1/pages/gotchas#importing-esm-packages.
TL;DR — add the following code to remix.config.js:
module.exports = { serverDependenciesToBundle: ["@uiball/loaders"] };
Options
Each loader has different defaults. You can see them on the website. Click on an individual loader and open the "source" sidebar. Default values will be listed at the top, followed by HTML and CSS if you want to copy/paste rather than use the React components.
size: number
The size of the loader. Specifically, this defines the largest dimension (height or width) in pixels.
<Ring size={35} />
color: string
Any valid CSS color value is accepted, so #000000
, red
, hsl(13, 68%, 63%)
and var(--my-custom-color)
are all a-okay.
<Ring color="papayawhip" />
speed: number
The speed of the animation. Each loader uses this number a little differently (individual parts of a given loader might have different timings), but in general this number represents the duration of a single full animation loop in seconds, so smaller = faster. If you set speed to 0
or Infinity
it will pause the animation.
<Ring speed={1.75} />
lineWeight: number
The width / stroke in pixels of line-based loaders like <Waveform />
or <RaceBy />
. You can see if an individual loader supports this property on the website.
<Ring lineWeight={3.5} />
License
MIT