/vue-plyr

A set of Vue components for the plyr video & audio player.

Primary LanguageVueMIT LicenseMIT

vue-plyr

v5.0.4 - Changelog

A set of Vue components for the plyr video & audio player.

This is useful for when you want a nice video player in your Vue app.

It uses plyr v3 for the players.

Supported player types: HTML5 video, HTML5 audio, YouTube (div & progressive enhancement), and Vimeo (div & progressive enhancement).

Installation

yarn add vue-plyr # or npm i vue-plyr

Browser

Just include Vue, the script file, and the css. e.g.:

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/vue"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/vue-plyr/dist/vue-plyr.js"></script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/vue-plyr/dist/vue-plyr.css">

Module

// In your main vue file - the one where you create the initial vue instance.
import Vue from 'vue'
import VuePlyr from 'vue-plyr'

Vue.use(VuePlyr)

Usage

Once installed, it can be used in a template as simply as:

<!-- video element -->
<vue-plyr>
  <video poster="poster.png" src="video.mp4">
    <source src="video-720p.mp4" type="video/mp4" size="720">
    <source src="video-1080p.mp4" type="video/mp4" size="1080">
    <track kind="captions" label="English" srclang="en" src="captions-en.vtt" default>
  </video>
</vue-plyr>

<!-- audio element -->
<vue-plyr>
  <audio>
    <source src="audio.mp3" type="audio/mp3"/>
    <source src="audio.ogg" type="audio/ogg"/>
  </audio>
</vue-plyr>

<!-- youtube iframe with progressive enhancement (extra queries after the url to optimize the embed) -->
<vue-plyr>
  <div class="plyr__video-embed">
    <iframe
      src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/bTqVqk7FSmY?iv_load_policy=3&amp;modestbranding=1&amp;playsinline=1&amp;showinfo=0&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1"
      allowfullscreen allowtransparency allow="autoplay">
    </iframe>
  </div>
</vue-plyr>

<!-- youtube div element -->
<vue-plyr>
  <div data-plyr-provider="youtube" data-plyr-embed-id="bTqVqk7FSmY"></div>
</vue-plyr>

<!-- vimeo iframe with progressive enhancement (extra queries after the url to optimize the embed) -->
<vue-plyr>
    <div class="plyr__video-embed">
      <iframe
        src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/76979871?loop=false&amp;byline=false&amp;portrait=false&amp;title=false&amp;speed=true&amp;transparent=0&amp;gesture=media"
        allowfullscreen allowtransparency allow="autoplay">
      </iframe>
    </div>
  </vue-plyr>

<!-- vimeo div element -->
<vue-plyr>
  <div data-plyr-provider="vimeo" data-plyr-embed-id="76979871"></div>
</vue-plyr>

Player Instance

To access the player instance, you have two options. The preferred method is to access the player through the refs attribute.

<template>
  <vue-plyr ref="player"></vue-plyr>
</template>
<script>
  name: 'Component',
  mounted () {
    console.log(this.player)
  },
  computed: {
    player () { return this.$refs.player.player }
  }
</script>

You are also able to access it through the @player event (soon to be removed) which is emitted when the component is mounted. The payload is the player object. You can use this to manipulate the instance directly.

Events

If you want to capture events from the plyr instance, there are a few options:

The preferred method is accessing the player instance through the ref attribute and using that object for events, as you would with a vanilla plyr instance.

Valid events are here.

<template>
  <vue-plyr ref="player"></vue-plyr>
</template>
<script>
  name: 'Component',
  mounted () {
    this.player.on('event', () => console.log('event fired'))
  },
  computed: {
    player () { return this.$refs.player.player }
  }
</script>

The other way (soon to be removed) is to just pass an array of the events you want emitted.

<vue-plyr :emit="['timeupdate','exitfullscreen']" @timeupdate="videoTimeUpdated" @exitfullscreen="exitedFullScreen">

Options

For custom options you can pass an options prop which is an object that will be passed to the new Plyr() creation. Available options here. I added an additional option (hideYouTubeDOMError) that hides the error that is always logged when destroying a YouTube player. It defaults to true, and you can disable it to see the error by setting it to false.

SSR

This should support SSR out of the box. For nuxt, create a file called vue-plyr.js in your plugins folder containing only the three lines:

import Vue from 'vue'
import VuePlyr from 'vue-plyr'.

Vue.use(VuePlyr)

Then, in your nuxt.config.js file add '~/plugins/vue-plyr' to the plugins array. The vue-plyr element should be globally registered now.

Author

vue-plyr © RedXTech, Released under the MIT License.