Angular component which monitors HTTP requests and shows a custom loader element when calls start and hides it when they complete.
http://wongatech.github.io/angular-http-loader/
NPM:
npm install --save angular-http-loader
Load angular-http-loader.min.js:
<script src="path/to/angular-http-loader.min.js"></script>
Add the ng.httpLoader
module as a dependency in your application:
angular.module('demo', ['ng.httpLoader'])
Whitelist the external domains that you want the loader to show for:
.config([
'httpMethodInterceptorProvider',
function (httpMethodInterceptorProvider) {
httpMethodInterceptorProvider.whitelistDomain('github.com');
httpMethodInterceptorProvider.whitelistDomain('twitter.com');
// ...
}
])
You can whitelist requests to the local server:
.config([
'httpMethodInterceptorProvider',
function (httpMethodInterceptorProvider) {
// ...
httpMethodInterceptorProvider.whitelistLocalRequests();
// ...
}
])
Add an HTML element with the ng-http-loader
directive. This will be displayed
while requests are pending:
<div ng-http-loader template="example/loader.tpl.html"></div>
Monitor only GET
requests:
<div ng-http-loader methods="GET" template="example/loader.tpl.html"></div>
Monitor POST and PUT requests:
<div ng-http-loader methods="['POST', 'PUT']" template="example/loader.tpl.html"></div>
HTTP loader allows you to pass a title to your template:
<div ng-http-loader title="example" methods="GET" template="example/loader.tpl.html"></div>
And use that in your template:
<span>Loader for {{title}}</span>
HTTP loader allows you to pass a ttl in seconds to your template. This tells the loader to be visible at least for the given amount of time, i.e.
<div ng-http-loader ttl="2" methods="GET" template="example/loader.tpl.html"></div>
The loader should be now visible at least 2 seconds, independent of the total http request(s) dispatched. Should the total amount of time of the request(s) be larger than the ttl, the loader will dismiss when the last http request is done.
We ❤️ pull requests!
To contribute:
- Fork the repo
- Run
npm install
- Run
grunt workflow:dev
to watch for changes, lint, build and run tests as you're working - Write your unit tests for your change
- Run
grunt package
to update the distribution files - Check that the demo app works (acceptance tests to be added)
- Update README.md and, if necessary, the demo page