Skip to content

jscheid/visibility.js

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

61 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Visibility.js – a wrapper for the Page Visibility API

Visibility.js allow you to determine whether your web page is visible to an user, is hidden in background tab or is prerendering. It allows you use the page visibility state in JavaScript logic and improve browser performance by disabling unnecessary timers and AJAX requests, or improve user interface experience (for example, by stopping video playback or slideshow when user switches to another browser tab).

Moreover, you can detect if the browser is just prerendering the page while the user has not still opened the link, and don’t count this as a visit in your analytics module, or do not run heavy calculations or other actions which will disable the prerendering.

This library is a wrapper of the Page Visibility API. It eases usage of the API by hiding vendor-specific property prefixes and adding some high-level functions.

In most cases you don’t need to check whether the Page Visibility API is actually supported in the browser as, if it does not, the library will just assume that the page is visible all the time, and your logic will still work correctly, albeit less effective in some cases.

Page Visibility API is natively supported by Google Chrome, Firefox and IE 10. You can add support for old Firefox (5–9 versions) by MozVisibility hack (include it before Visibility.js). For others browsers you can use lib/visibility.fallback.js with focus/blur hack (note that this hack have some issue, see falllback documentation).

Sponsored by Evil Martians.

Translations

Документация на русском: http://habrahabr.ru/blogs/javascript/125833/

States

Currently the Page Visibility API supports three visibility states:

  • visible: user has opened the page and works within it.
  • hidden: user has switched to another tab or minimized browser window.
  • prerender: browser is just prerendering a page which may possibly be opened by the user to make the apparent loading time lesser.

Timers

The main use case for this library is to enable some of the times only when content is visible to the user, i.e. the ones animating a countdown animation.

Visibility.every(interval, callback) is similar to setInterval(callback, interval), but calls callback every interval ms only if the page is visible. For example, let’s create a countdown timer:

Visibility.every(1000, function () {
    updateCountdownAnimation();
});

You can provide an additional interval which will be used when the page is hidden. In next example, a check for inbox updates will be run every 1 minute for a visible page and every 5 minutes for a hidden one:

var minute = 60 * 1000;
Visibility.every(minute, 5 * minute, function () {
    checkForEmail();
});

Note that the callback will also be executed on every hidden->visible state change to update old contents.

A syntactic sugar for specifying time intervals is supported when jQuery Chrono plugin is included before Visibility.js. It can be used like this:

Visibility.every('minute', '5 minutes', function () {
    checkNewMails();
});

Visibility.every returns a timer identifier, much like the setTimeout function. It cannot be passed to clearInterval, through, and you should use Visibility.stop(id) to stop the timer.

var slideshow = Visibility.every(5 * 1000, function () {
    nextSlide();
});

$('.stopSlideshow').click(function () {
    Visibility.stop(slideshow);
});

If the browser does not support the Page Visibility API, Visibility.every will fall back to setInterval, and callback will be run every interval ms for both the hidden and visible pages.

Initializers

In another common use case you need to execute some actions upon a switch to particular visibility state.

Waiting until the page becomes visible

Visibility.onVisible(callback) checks current state of the page. If it is visible now, it will run callback, otherwise it will wait until state changes to visible, and then run callback.

For example, let’s show an animated notification only when the page is visible, so if an user opens a page in the background, the animation will delay until the page becomes visible, i.e. until the user has switched to a tab with the page:

Visibility.onVisible(function () {
    Notification.animateNotice("Hello");
});

If a browser doesn’t support Page Visibility API, Visibility.onVisible will run the callback immediately.

Wait until the page is opened after prerendering

A web developer can hint a browser (using Prerendering API) that an user is likely to click on some link (i.e. on a “Next” link in a multi-page article), and the browser then may prefetch and prerender the page, so that the user will not wait after actually going via the like.

But you may not want to count the browser prerendering a page as a visitor in your analytics system. Moreover, the browser will disable prerendering if you will try to do heavy computations or use audio/video tags on the page. So, you may decide to not run parts of the code while prerendering and wait until the user actually opens the link.

You can use Visibility.afterPrerendering(callback) in this cases. For example, this code will only take real visitors (and not page prerenderings) into account:

Visibility.afterPrerendering(function () {
    Statistics.countVisitor();
});

If the browser doesn’t support Page Visibility API, Visibility.afterPrerendering will run callback immediately.

Low-level API

In some cases you may need more low-level methods. For example, you may want to count the time user has viewed the page in foreground and time it has stayed in background.

Visibility.isSupported() will return true if browser supports the Page Visibility API:

if( Visibility.isSupported() ) {
    Statistics.startTrackingVisibility();
}

Visibility.state() will return a string with visibility state. More states can be added in the future, so for most cases a simpler Visibility.hidden() method can be used. It will return true if the page is hidden by any reason. For example, while prerendering, Visibility.state() will return "prerender", but Visibility.hidden() will return true.

This code will aid in collecting page visibility statistics:

$(document).load(function () {

    if ( 'hidden' == Visibility.state() ) {
        Statistics.userOpenPageInBackgroundTab();
    }
    if ( 'prerender' == Visibility.state() ) {
        Statistics.pageIsPrerendering();
    }

});

And this example will only enable auto-playing when the page is opening as a visible tab (not a background one):

$(document).load(function () {

   if ( !Visibility.hidden() ) {
       VideoPlayer.play();
   }

});

Using Visibility.change(callback) you can listen to visibility state changing events. The callback takes 2 arguments: an event object and a state name.

Let’s collect some statistics with this evented approach:

Visibility.change(function (e, state) {
    Statistics.visibilityChange(state);
});

Installing

Ruby on Rails

For Ruby on Rails you can use gem for Assets Pipeline.

  1. Add visibilityjs gem to Gemfile:

    gem "visibilityjs"
  2. Install gems:

    bundle install
  3. Include Visibility.js to your application.js.coffee:

    #= require visibility

Other

If you don’t use any assets packaging manager (it’s very bad idea), you can use already minified version of the library. Take it from: https://github.com/ai/visibility.js/downloads.

Alternatives

If you need smaller and simpler wrapper (for example, just to hide vendor prefixes), you can use visibly.js.

Contributing

  1. To run tests you need node.js and npm. For example, in Ubuntu run:

    sudo apt-get install nodejs npm
  2. Next install npm dependencies:

    npm install
  3. Run test server:

    ./node_modules/.bin/cake test
  4. Open tests in browser: localhost:8000.

  5. Also you can see real usage example in integration test test/integration.html.

About

Visibility.js – a wrapper for the Page Visibility API

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • CoffeeScript 50.8%
  • JavaScript 45.6%
  • Ruby 3.6%