/jquery.pan

Fullscreen Image Zoom and Pan plugin for Jquery with mobile and mouse wheel support

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Fullscreen Image Zoom and Pan with Jquery

Original 1.x version written by Samir Hazir. Version 2.x and 3.x written by me.

Fullscreen image zoom, pan and rotation plugin for jQuery

Features:

  • Automatically add zoom and pan to any images or elements with images
  • Auto-pan alongside pointer movement
  • Zoom in and out support. You can increase or decrease the zoom level with specific buttons or with the mouse wheel
  • Image rotation support with zoom and pan
  • Support for mobile devices. You can pan by dragging the zoomed image
  • Support from IE10+ and all modern desktop and mobile browsers

Getting Started

Include jQuery 3.x and the plugin on a page and initialize the plugin. See a working demo at https://jmalarcon.github.io/jquery.pan/ or check the index.html page of this repository. You can also use it as a dependency with npm by simply writing:

npm i jquery.pan

Works with jQuery 3.0+.

You must include a small CSS, jquery.pan.css in the dist/css folder (400b bytes gzipped).

<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/jquery.pan.css" />
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.4.1.min.js"></script>
<script src="jquery.pan.js"></script>

<script type="text/javascript">
    $(function(){
        $(".pan").pan();
    })
</script>

If there's a data-big attribute in the element, then that URL will be used for the zoomed image instead of the current image. If there's not a data-big attribute, then it should be an <img> element and the src attribute will be used to zoom the image, since a lot of images are limited in size to fit in their container (for example with the max-width property). Check out the index.html sample file in the repo:

<a class="pan" data-big="img/big1.jpg" href="#">
   <img src="img/small1.jpg" alt="" >
</a>
<img class="pan" style="max-width:150px;" src="img/big2.jpg" >

Therefore you can use it to show images by clicking on elements, even it those don't are images or don't include images.

IMPORTANT: it only adds the zoom capability to images that are smaller than their natural size or that have a data-big attribute, since small images don't need it. This is by design, since this is not a carrousel kind of viewer, but an individual image viewer.

Disable image rotation

The pan() method takes an optional boolean parameter to indicate if the rotation of images should be allowed or not.

By default it shows the rotation controls:

$(".gallery img").pan();    //Rotation controls are shown and enabled

If you call it with a false parameter, then the rotation controls will not be shown.

$(".gallery img").pan(false);    //No rotation controls

This is useful, for example in blogs or other environments where the images are manually added or reviewed and where images always have the right orientation. In those cases, disabling the rotation controls is a better option.

Returning value

This pan() method filters out the jQuery selection and returns a new jQuery selection with the final elements that have been processed to have zoom & pan capabilities. You can further process them as usual with jQuery, for example:

$(function(){
    $(".mainContent img").pan().each(function() {
        $(this).attr('title', 'CLICK TO ZOOM');
    });
})

License

Copyright (c) 2016 Samil Hazir, 2018-2020 José M. Alarcon Dual licensed under the GPL and MIT licenses.