Simple and easy to use lightbox script written in pure JavaScript.
- Written in pure JavaScript, no dependencies required
- Multiple-gallery support allows custom options for each
- Supports swipe gestures on touch-screen devices
- Full-screen mode available
- Modern and minimal look
- Image captions support
- Responsive images
- CSS3 transitions
- SVG buttons, no extra files to download
- Around 3.2KB gzipped
You can use one of the following methods:
npm install baguettebox.js --save
yarn add baguettebox.js
bower install baguettebox.js --save
- Use one of the following CDN providers:
-
Copy URLs of the latest version (both
.js
and.css
files) -
Paste the URLs in your HTML file:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="<CSS URL>">
<script src="<JS URL>" async></script>
- Download
baguetteBox.min.css
andbaguetteBox.min.js
files from thedist
folder. - Include them somewhere in your document:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/baguetteBox.min.css">
<script src="js/baguetteBox.min.js" async></script>
Initialize the script by running:
baguetteBox.run('.gallery');
where the first argument is a selector to a gallery (or galleries) containing a
tags. The HTML code may look like this:
<div class="gallery">
<a href="img/2-1.jpg" data-caption="Image caption">
<img src="img/thumbnails/2-1.jpg" alt="First image">
</a>
<a href="img/2-2.jpg">
<img src="img/thumbnails/2-2.jpg" alt="Second image">
</a>
...
</div>
To use captions put a title
or data-caption
attribute on the a
tag.
You can pass an object with custom options as the second parameter.
baguetteBox.run('.gallery', {
// Custom options
});
The following options are available:
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
captions |
Boolean | function(element) |
true |
Display image captions. Passing a function will use a string returned by this callback. The only argument is a element containing the image. Invoked in the context of the current gallery array |
buttons |
Boolean | 'auto' |
'auto' |
Display buttons. 'auto' hides buttons on touch-enabled devices or when only one image is available |
fullScreen |
Boolean |
false |
Enable full screen mode |
noScrollbars |
Boolean |
false |
Hide scrollbars when gallery is displayed |
bodyClass |
String |
'baguetteBox-open' |
Class name that will be appended to the body when lightbox is visible (works in IE 10+) |
ignoreClass |
String |
null |
It will ignore images with given class put on a tag |
titleTag |
Boolean |
false |
Use caption value also in the gallery img.title attribute |
async |
Boolean |
false |
Load files asynchronously |
preload |
Number |
2 |
How many files should be preloaded |
animation |
'slideIn' | 'fadeIn' | false |
'slideIn' |
Animation type |
afterShow |
function |
null |
Callback to be run after showing the overlay |
afterHide |
function |
null |
Callback to be run after hiding the overlay |
onChange |
function(currentIndex, imagesCount) |
null |
Callback to be run when image changes |
overlayBackgroundColor |
String |
'rgba (0,0,0,0.8)' |
Background color for the lightbox overlay |
filter |
RegExp |
/.+\.(gif|jpe?g|png|webp)/i |
Pattern to match image files. Applied to the a.href attribute |
Initialize baguetteBox.js
- @param
selector
{string} - valid CSS selector used byquerySelectorAll
- @param
userOptions
{object} - custom options (see #Customization) - @return {array} - an array of gallery objects (reflects elements found by the selector)
Show (if hidden) and move the gallery to a specific index
- @param
index
{number} - the position of the image - @param
gallery
{array} - gallery which should be opened, if omitted assumes the currently opened one - @return {boolean} - true on success or false if the index is invalid
Usage:
const gallery = baguetteBox.run('.gallery');
baguetteBox.show(index, gallery[0]);
Switch to the next image
- @return {boolean} - true on success or false if there are no more images to be loaded
Switch to the previous image
- @return {boolean} - true on success or false if there are no more images to be loaded
Hide the gallery
Remove the plugin with any event bindings
To use this feature, simply put data-at-{width}
attributes on a
tags with a value being the path to the desired image. {width}
should be the maximum screen width the image can be displayed at. The script chooses the first image with {width}
greater than or equal to the current screen width for best user experience.
That last data-at-X
image is also used in the case of a screen larger than X.
Here's an example of what the HTML code can look like:
<a href="img/2-1.jpg"
data-at-450="img/thumbs/2-1.jpg"
data-at-800="img/small/2-1.jpg"
data-at-1366="img/medium/2-1.jpg"
data-at-1920="img/big/2-1.jpg">
<img src="img/thumbs/2-1.jpg">
</a>
If you have 1366x768 resolution baguetteBox.js will choose "img/medium/2-1.jpg"
. If, however, it's 1440x900 it'll choose "img/big/2-1.jpg"
. Keep the href
attribute as a fallback (link to a bigger image e.g. of HD size) for older browsers.
Desktop:
- IE 8+
- Chrome
- Firefox 3.6+
- Opera 12+
- Safari 5+
Mobile:
- Safari on iOS
- Chrome on Android
Feel free to report any issues! If you wish to contribute by fixing a bug or implementing a new feature, please first read the CONTRIBUTING guide.
Creation of baguetteBox.js
was inspired by a great jQuery plugin touchTouch.
Copyright (c) 2018 feimosi
This content is released under the MIT License.