loading="lazy" attribute polyfill
Work in progress
Fast and lightweight vanilla JavaScript polyfill for the native behaviour to load elements right before they enter the viewport. Provides graceful degradation, and is - not just thatfor - SEO friendly. Handles images with srcset and within picture, as well as iframes. loading="lazy" will be a huge improve for todays web performance challenges, so use and polyfill it today!
- Supports the standard
loading="lazy"
attribute onimage
andiframe
elements - Released under the MIT license
- Made in Germany
Features
TBD
Core concepts
The polyfill was designed with the following concepts kept in mind:
- dependency-free
- Using JavaScript with graceful degradation
Installation
Just integrate the JavaScript file into your code - et voilà.
You may optionally load via NPM or Bower:
$ npm install loading-attribute-polyfill
$ bower install loading-attribute-polyfill
You could even load the polyfill asynchronously: https://jsbin.com/yitarajawe/edit?html,css
Afterwards you'll need to wrap all of your <img>
and <iframe>
HTML tags that you'd like to lazy load (and thatfor added a loading="lazy"
attribute as well) by an <noscript>
HTML tag:
Simple image
<noscript class="loading-lazy">
<img
src="simpleimage.jpg"
loading="lazy"
alt=".."
width="250"
height="150"
/>
</noscript>
Image wrapped in a picture tag
<picture>
<noscript class="loading-lazy">
<source
media="(min-width: 40em)"
srcset="
simpleimage.huge.jpg 1x,
simpleimage.huge.2x.jpg 2x
"
/>
<source
srcset="
simpleimage.jpg 1x,
simpleimage.2x.jpg 2x
"
/>
<img
src="simpleimage.jpg"
loading="lazy"
alt=".."
width="250"
height="150"
/>
</noscript>
</picture>
Image with srcset
<noscript class="loading-lazy">
<img
src="simpleimage.jpg"
srcset="
simpleimage.1024.jpg 1024w,
simpleimage.640.jpg 640w,
simpleimage.320.jpg 320w
"
sizes="(min-width: 36em) 33.3vw, 100vw"
alt="A rad wolf"
loading="lazy"
/>
</noscript>
Iframe
<noscript class="loading-lazy">
<iframe
src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/87110435"
width="320"
height="180"
loading="lazy"
></iframe>
</noscript>
Optional additional dependencies
In case you'd like to support older versions of Microsoft EDGE, Microsoft Internet Explorer 11 or Apple Safari up to 12.0, you would could (conditionally) load an IntersectionObserver polyfill:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/intersection-observer
Nevertheless this polyfill would still work in those browsers without that other polyfill included, but this small amount of users wouldn't totally benefit from the lazy loading functionality - we've at least got you partly covered by using the Microsoft proprietary lazyloading resource hints.
API
Nothing really, just plug it in, it will should work out of the box.
Demo
See the polyfill in action either by downloading / forking this repo and have a look at demo/index.html
, or at the hosted demo: https://mfranzke.github.io/loading-attribute-polyfill/demo/
things to keep in mind
- The demo HTML code is meant to be simple