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Fully customizable Angular component for rendering After Effects animations 🚀

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shahzadhassan10/ngx-lottie

 
 

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A minimal customizable performance-stable Angular component for rendering After Effects animations. Compatible with Angular 8+ and Ivy renderer.

Table of contents

Features

  • rich: ngx-lottie provides more opportunities to work with API exposed by Lottie
  • strict: all types of objects and events are available to you
  • performant: the lottie-web library can be loaded synchronously or on demand

Quick example

<ng-lottie
  width="600px"
  height="500px"
  containerClass="moving-box"
  [styles]="styles"
  [options]="options"
  (animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"
  (configReady)="configReady()"
  (dataReady)="dataReady()"
  (domLoaded)="domLoaded()"
  (enterFrame)="enterFrame($event)"
  (segmentStart)="segmentStart($event)"
  (complete)="complete($event)"
  (loopComplete)="loopComplete($event)"
  (destroy)="destroy($event)"
  (error)="error($event)"
></ng-lottie>

Installation

To install ngx-lottie run the following command:

npm i lottie-web ngx-lottie
# Or if you use yarn
yarn add lottie-web ngx-lottie

Usage

First, import the LottieModule into AppModule:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieModule } from 'ngx-lottie';
import player from 'lottie-web';

// Note we need a separate function as it's required
// by the AOT compiler
export function playerFactory() {
  return player;
}

@NgModule({
  imports: [LottieModule.forRoot({ player: playerFactory })]
})
export class AppModule {}

The lottie-web library can be loaded on demand using dynamic import. Given the following code:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieModule } from 'ngx-lottie';

export function playerFactory() {
  return import('lottie-web');
}

@NgModule({
  imports: [LottieModule.forRoot({ player: playerFactory })]
})
export class AppModule {}

Now you can simply use the ng-lottie component and provide your custom options via the options binding:

import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { AnimationItem } from 'lottie-web';
import { AnimationOptions } from 'ngx-lottie';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <ng-lottie [options]="options" (animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"></ng-lottie>
  `
})
export class AppComponent {
  options: AnimationOptions = {
    path: '/assets/animation.json'
  };

  animationCreated(animationItem: AnimationItem): void {
    console.log(animationItem);
  }
}

Also it's possible to use the lottie directive if you'd like to provide your own custom container and control it:

import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { AnimationItem } from 'lottie-web';
import { AnimationOptions } from 'ngx-lottie';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <main lottie [options]="options" (animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"></main>
  `
})
export class AppComponent {
  options: AnimationOptions = {
    path: '/assets/animation.json'
  };

  animationCreated(animationItem: AnimationItem): void {
    console.log(animationItem);
  }
}

Notice that you will need to import the LottieModule into other modules as it exports ng-lottie component and lottie directive. But forRoot has to be called only once!

Caching

lottie-web will load your JSON file every time when animation is being created. When importing LottieModule into the root module you can provide the useCache option:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { LottieModule } from 'ngx-lottie';

export function playerFactory() {
  return import('lottie-web');
}

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    LottieModule.forRoot({
      player: playerFactory,
      useCache: true
    })
  ]
})
export class AppModule {}

This will enable cache under the hood. Since the cache is enabled your JSON file will be loaded only once.

API

Bindings

The ng-lottie component supports the following bindings:

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <ng-lottie
      width="500px"
      height="600px"
      containerClass="moving-box"
      [styles]="styles"
      [options]="options"
    ></ng-lottie>
  `
})
export class AppComponent {
  options: AnimationOptions = {
    path: '/assets/animation.json'
  };

  styles: Partial<CSSStyleDeclaration> = {
    maxWidth: '500px',
    margin: '0 auto'
  };
}
  • options: AnimationOptions options used by AnimationItem
  • width?: string container element width in pixels. Bound to [style.width]. You can provide any CSS unit, e.g. 100em
  • height?: string container element height in pixels. Bound to [style.height]. You can provide any CSS unit, e.g. 100em
  • styles?: Partial<CSSStyleDeclaration> custom styles object. Bound to [ngStyle]
  • containerClass?: string custom container class. Bound to element

The lottie directive supports only options binding.

Events

@Output() Type Required Description
animationCreated AnimationItem optional Dispatched after the lottie successfully creates animation
configReady void optional Dispatched after the needed renderer is configured
dataReady void optional Dispatched when all parts of the animation have been loaded
domLoaded void optional Dispatched when elements have been added to the DOM
enterFrame BMEnterFrameEvent optional Dispatched after entering the new frame
segmentStart BMSegmentStartEvent optional Dispatched when the new segment is adjusted
loopComplete BMCompleteLoopEvent optional Dispatched after completing frame loop
complete BMCompleteEvent optional Dispatched after completing the last frame
destroy BMDestroyEvent optional Dispatched in the ngOnDestroy hook of the service that manages lottie's events, it's useful for releasing resources
error BMRenderFrameErrorEvent OR BMConfigErrorEvent optional Dispatched if the lottie player could not render some frame or parse the config

Optimizations

The ng-lottie component is marked with OnPush change detection strategy. This means it will not be checked in any phase of the change detection mechanism until you change the reference to some binding. For example if you use an svg renderer and there are a lot DOM elements projected — you would like to avoid checking this component, as it's not necessary.

Also AnimationItem events are listened outside of the Angular zone. Thus you shouldn't worry that Lottie's events will cause the ApplicationRef to invoke tick every ms.

Note! All AnimationItem methods must be invoked outside of the Angular zone. Given the following code:

import { Component, NgZone } from '@angular/core';
import { AnimationItem } from 'lottie-web';
import { AnimationOptions } from 'ngx-lottie';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <ng-lottie [options]="options" (animationCreated)="animationCreated($event)"></ng-lottie>

    <button (click)="stop()">Stop</button>
    <button (click)="play()">Play</button>
  `
})
export class AppComponent {
  options: AnimationOptions = {
    path: '/assets/animation.json'
  };

  private animationItem: AnimationItem;

  constructor(private ngZone: NgZone) {}

  animationCreated(animationItem: AnimationItem): void {
    this.animationItem = animationItem;
  }

  stop(): void {
    this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => this.animatiomItem.stop());
  }

  play(): void {
    this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => this.animatiomItem.play());
  }
}

Server side rendering

⚠️ Warning: This works only if Ivy is NOT enabled! Ivy doesn't work with SSR right now and probably will be supported in Angular 10.

By default, lottie will load your json file with animation data every time you create an animation. You may have some problems with the connection, so there may be some delay or even timeout. It's worth loading animation data only once and cache it on the client side, so every time you create an animation — the animation data will be retrieved from cache.

ngx-lottie/server package gives you the opportunity to preload animation data and cache it using TransferState.

How2?

TL;DR - see integration folder.

Import the LottieServerModule into your AppServerModule:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { ServerModule, ServerTransferStateModule } from '@angular/platform-server';
import { LottieServerModule } from 'ngx-lottie/server';

import { AppModule } from './app.module';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    // `AppModule` first as you know
    AppModule,
    ServerModule,
    ServerTransferStateModule,
    LottieServerModule.forRoot({
      preloadAnimations: {
        folder: 'dist/assets',
        animations: ['data.json']
      }
    })
  ],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppServerModule {}

Don't forget to import BrowserTransferStateModule into your AppModule. Let's look at these options. animations is an array of json files, that contain animation data, that should be read on the server side, cached and transfered on the client. folder is a path where your json files are located, but you should use it properly, this path is joined with the process.cwd(). Imagine such project structure:

— dist (here you store your output artifacts)
  — project-name
    — assets
    — index.html
    — main.hash.js
— dist-server
  — server.js
— src (here is your app)
— angular.json
— package.json
— webpack.config.js

If you start a server from the root folder like node dist-server/server, thus the folder property should equal dist/project-name/assets.

After installing LottieServerModule - now you have to import LottieTransferState from the ngx-lottie package. Don't worry, this service is tree-shakable and won't be bundled if you don't inject it anywhere.

Inject this service into your component where you declare animation options:

import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { AnimationOptions, LottieTransferState } from 'ngx-lottie';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <ng-lottie [options]="options"></ng-lottie>
  `
})
export class AppComponent {
  options: AnimationOptions = {
    animationData: this.lottieTransferState.get('data.json')
  };

  constructor(private lottieTransferState: LottieTransferState) {}
}

Notice, data.json is a filename that you pass to the preloadAnimations.animations property. Finally change this:

platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule(AppModule);

To this:

document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => {
  platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule(AppModule);
});

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