Introduction#
- Hey, I am Immerse
- The article was first published on my personal blog https://yaolifeng.com, for more content please follow my personal blog
- Reprint instructions: Please indicate the original source and copyright statement at the beginning of the article!
Cause#
- Recently launched personal blog, the fragment page has a lot of images, and the experience in image loading is very poor, it can be said to be a cliff-like drop, with no transition from 0 to 1 (this greatly affects the page layout and user experience, for images with set width and height it’s fine, but if not set, there will be a process of an image stretching high)
Coincidence#
- On the day I was preparing to write this article, the front-end master Nan Jiu published an article, I exclaimed that big data is amazing 👍🏻 Article: Click to view
- In this article, we will discuss several other solutions, without further ado, let's get to the point.
- For conventional image optimization, I will not elaborate here, roughly as follows:
- Compress images, use CSS sprites, lazy loading, preloading, CDN caching, appropriate image formats, Qiniu CDN image parameters, etc.
- For conventional image optimization, I will not elaborate here, roughly as follows:
Exploration#
- Below are several solutions mentioned in this article (since the personal project is based on Next, some example codes are in React)
- (1) Use the main color of the image
- (2) Use a specific color
- (3) Use a thumbnail of the image
- (4) Use blurred + compressed images
- (5) Image placeholders
Solution 1: Use the main color of the image#
- In daily development, our image
src
may be dynamic, which is a stringstring
url, when we specifyplaceholder="blur"
, we must also addblurDataURL
attribute,
import Image from 'next/image';
// Pixel GIF code adapted from https://stackoverflow.com/a/33919020/266535
const keyStr = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/=';
const triplet = (e1: number, e2: number, e3: number) =>
keyStr.charAt(e1 >> 2) +
keyStr.charAt(((e1 & 3) << 4) | (e2 >> 4)) +
keyStr.charAt(((e2 & 15) << 2) | (e3 >> 6)) +
keyStr.charAt(e3 & 63);
const rgbDataURL = (r: number, g: number, b: number) =>
`data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAPAA${
triplet(0, r, g) + triplet(b, 255, 255)
}/yH5BAAAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==`;
const Color = () => (
<div>
<h1>Image Component With Color Data URL</h1>
<Image
alt="Dog"
src="/dog.jpg"
placeholder="blur"
blurDataURL={rgbDataURL(237, 181, 6)}
width={750}
height={1000}
style={{
maxWidth: '100%',
height: 'auto'
}}
/>
<Image
alt="Cat"
src="/cat.jpg"
placeholder="blur"
blurDataURL={rgbDataURL(2, 129, 210)}
width={750}
height={1000}
style={{
maxWidth: '100%',
height: 'auto'
}}
/>
</div>
);
export default Color;
Solution 2: Use a specific color#
- In
next.config.js
, configureplaceholder
tocolor
, and then use thebackgroundColor
attribute
// next.config.js
module.exports = {
images: {
placeholder: 'color',
backgroundColor: '#121212'
}
};
// Usage
<Image src="/path/to/image.jpg" alt="image title" width={500} height={500} placeholder="color" />
Solution 3: Use a thumbnail of the image#
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
<title>Progressive Image Loading</title>
<style>
.placeholder {
background-color: #f6f6f6;
background-size: cover;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
}
.placeholder img {
position: absolute;
opacity: 0;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 100%;
transition: opacity 1s linear;
}
.placeholder img.loaded {
opacity: 1;
}
.img-small {
filter: blur(50px);
transform: scale(1);
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div
class="placeholder"
data-large="https://qncdn.mopic.mozigu.net/work/143/24/42b204ae3ade4f38/1_sg-uLNm73whmdOgKlrQdZA.jpg"
>
<img
src="https://qncdn.mopic.mozigu.net/work/143/24/5307e9778a944f93/1_sg-uLNm73whmdOgKlrQdZA.jpg"
class="img-small"
/>
<div style="padding-bottom: 66.6%"></div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
<script>
window.onload = function () {
var placeholder = document.querySelector('.placeholder'),
small = placeholder.querySelector('.img-small');
// 1. Show small image and load
var img = new Image();
img.src = small.src;
img.onload = function () {
small.classList.add('loaded');
};
// 2. Load large image
var imgLarge = new Image();
imgLarge.src = placeholder.dataset.large;
imgLarge.onload = function () {
imgLarge.classList.add('loaded');
};
placeholder.appendChild(imgLarge);
};
</script>
Solution 4: Use blurred + compressed images#
// progressive-image.tsx
'use client';
import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
import imageCompression from 'browser-image-compression';
interface ProgressiveImageProps {
src: string;
alt?: string;
width?: number;
height?: number;
layout?: 'fixed' | 'responsive' | 'fill' | 'intrinsic';
className?: string;
style?: React.CSSProperties;
}
export const ProgressiveImage: React.FC<ProgressiveImageProps> = ({
src,
alt = '',
width,
height,
layout = 'responsive',
className = '',
style = {}
}) => {
const [currentSrc, setCurrentSrc] = useState<string>(src);
const [isLoading, setIsLoading] = useState<boolean>(true);
const [blurLevel, setBlurLevel] = useState<number>(20);
useEffect(() => {
let isMounted = true;
const loadImage = async () => {
try {
// Load and compress the original image
const response = await fetch(src);
const blob = await response.blob();
// Generate low-quality preview image
const tinyOptions = {
maxSizeMB: 0.0002,
maxWidthOrHeight: 16,
useWebWorker: true,
initialQuality: 0.1
};
const tinyBlob = await imageCompression(blob, tinyOptions);
if (isMounted) {
const tinyUrl = URL.createObjectURL(tinyBlob);
setCurrentSrc(tinyUrl);
// Start gradually reducing blur
startSmoothTransition();
}
// Load the original image
const highQualityImage = new Image();
highQualityImage.src = src;
highQualityImage.onload = () => {
if (isMounted) {
setCurrentSrc(src);
// Continue smooth transition when high-quality image is loaded
setTimeout(() => {
setIsLoading(false);
}, 100);
}
};
} catch (error) {
console.error('Error loading image:', error);
if (isMounted) {
setCurrentSrc(src);
setIsLoading(false);
}
}
};
const startSmoothTransition = () => {
// Transition from 20px blur to 10px
const startBlur = 20;
const endBlur = 10;
const duration = 1000; // 1 second
const steps = 20;
const stepDuration = duration / steps;
const blurStep = (startBlur - endBlur) / steps;
let currentStep = 0;
const interval = setInterval(() => {
if (currentStep < steps && isMounted) {
setBlurLevel(startBlur - blurStep * currentStep);
currentStep++;
} else {
clearInterval(interval);
}
}, stepDuration);
};
setIsLoading(true);
setBlurLevel(20);
loadImage();
return () => {
isMounted = false;
if (currentSrc && currentSrc.startsWith('blob:')) {
URL.revokeObjectURL(currentSrc);
}
};
}, [src]);
const getContainerStyle = (): React.CSSProperties => {
const baseStyle: React.CSSProperties = {
position: 'relative',
overflow: 'hidden'
};
switch (layout) {
case 'responsive':
return {
...baseStyle,
maxWidth: width || '100%',
width: '100%'
};
case 'fixed':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: width,
height: height
};
case 'fill':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: '100%',
height: '100%',
position: 'absolute',
top: 0,
left: 0
};
case 'intrinsic':
return {
...baseStyle,
maxWidth: width,
width: '100%'
};
default:
return baseStyle;
}
};
const getImageStyle = (): React.CSSProperties => {
const baseStyle: React.CSSProperties = {
filter: isLoading ? `blur(${blurLevel}px)` : 'none',
transition: 'filter 0.8s ease-in-out', // Increase transition time
transform: 'scale(1.1)', // Slightly enlarge to prevent edges during blur
...style
};
switch (layout) {
case 'responsive':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: '100%',
height: 'auto',
display: 'block'
};
case 'fixed':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: width,
height: height
};
case 'fill':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: '100%',
height: '100%',
objectFit: 'cover'
};
case 'intrinsic':
return {
...baseStyle,
width: '100%',
height: 'auto'
};
default:
return baseStyle;
}
};
return (
<div className={`${className}`} style={getContainerStyle()}>
{currentSrc && <img src={currentSrc} alt={alt} style={getImageStyle()} />}
</div>
);
};
// Usage
<ProgressiveImage
src={photo}
alt={short.title}
width={300}
height={250}
layout="responsive"
className="h-full min-h-[150px]"
/>
Solution 5: Image placeholders#
- Next.js's next/image component
placeholder
attribute provides an optionblur
, which defaults toempty
blur
will generate a blurred preview image (but this option will increase the initial loading time because it takes time to generate the blurred image)- Note: If
placeholder="blur"
, you must use theimport
static import method for images, so that Next.js will preprocess the images for progressive loading
import Image from 'next/image';
import mountains from '/public/mountains.jpg';
const PlaceholderBlur = () => (
<div>
<h1>Image Component With Placeholder Blur</h1>
<Image
alt="Mountains"
src={mountains}
placeholder="blur"
width={700}
height={475}
style={{
maxWidth: '100%',
height: 'auto'
}}
/>
</div>
);
export default PlaceholderBlur;
Conclusion#
- The first impression of a product is very important, and a good user experience is essential for a product.
- Thank you for reading, see you next time!