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gif-tsx

A simple TypeScript-first React GIF player library. Ships with best practices like:

  • ESM module specification for tree-shaking

  • Strict type-checking

gif-tsx offers total flexibility when it comes to writing a GIF player component. Because controls are exposed via a reusable hook, the consumer is given complete creative freedom when it comes to defining what the GIF player should do and how it should look.

Install

Install with your choice of package manager.

NPM

npm install gif-tsx

Yarn

yarn add gif-tsx

Getting started

The useGifController hook is the core of this library, and returns a GIF controller bound to a canvas element which plays a GIF.

Let's start by writing a basic GifPlayer component. We will first need to import our dependencies:

import React, { useRef } from "react";
import { useGifController } from "gif-tsx";

And then, we need to provide two things.

  1. A URL to load our GIF from.

  2. A ref to a canvas element that will be rendered after we load our GIF.

To load a custom GIF (i.e. not one served remotely), you must add the GIF to your public/ directory which is configured by your bundler (e.g. Webpack, Snowpack, or Vite). If you are using Vite, it is as simple as moving your GIF to the public/ directory at the project root.

Then, we handle the error, loading, and resolved states accordingly, and we're all good to go!

function GifPlayer() {
  const canvasRef = useRef<HTMLCanvasElement>(null);
  const controller = useGifController("/earth.gif", canvasRef);

  // handle loading state
  if (controller.state === "loading") {
    // `controller` has type `GifControllerLoading`
    return null;
  }

  // handle error state
  if (controller.state === "error") {
    // `controller` has type `GifControllerError`
    console.error(controller.errorMessage);
    return null;
  }

  // `controller` has type `GifControllerResolved`
  const { canvasProps, play, pause } = controller;

  return (
    <div>
      <canvas {...canvasProps} ref={canvasRef} />
      <button alt="play" onClick={play} />
      <button alt="pause" onClick={pause} />
    </div>
  );
}

API

useGifController

The useGifController hook accepts 3 parameters:

  • url: string -- The URL of the GIF to play. This can be a local or remote URL. For example, it can be /earth.gif if earth.gif is served by the local server, or https://foo.bar/earth.gif if earth.gif is served by foo.bar.

  • canvasRef: React.RefObject<HTMLCanvasElement> -- A ref bound to the canvas element returned in the resolved state.

  • autoplay: boolean = false (optional, defaults to false) -- Whether to begin playing the GIF as soon as the GIF resolves.

useGifController has 3 possible states, exposed by the GifController.state property.

  • loading: The GIF is currently being fetched and processed.

  • error: There was an error fetching or processing the GIF. The GIF controller exposes an error message on GifController.errorMessage.

  • resolved: The GIF was fetched and processed successfully. The GIF player controls are only exposed in this state.

The component calling useGifController should handle the states separately. Assuming you've handled the loading and error states accordingly, the following controls are exposed by the GIF controller.

  • canvasProps: HTMLCanvasElementProps -- Props to pass to the canvas element. Includes the ideal width and height.

  • playing: boolean -- Whether the GIF is currently playing.

  • play: () => void -- Callback which begins playing the GIF.

  • pause: () => void -- Callback which pauses the GIF.

  • restart: () => void -- Callback which resets the GIF back to the first frame. Does not affect playback state.

  • frameIndex: number -- The current frame, 0-indexed.

  • renderFrame: (frameIndex: number) => void -- Callback which accepts an argument frameIndex: number that renders the frame at frame index frameIndex.

  • renderNextFrame: () => void -- Callback which renders the next frame of the GIF.

  • renderPreviousFrame: () => void -- Callback which renders the previous frame of the GIF.

  • width: number -- Width of the loaded GIF.

  • height: number -- Height of the loaded GIF.

License

MIT. See LICENSE file in project root.

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A TypeScript-first React GIF player library.

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