You can find our latest examples at https://github.com/imgly/pesdk-web-examples.
PhotoEditor SDK Vue.js wrapper
PhotoEditor SDK is a product of img.ly GmbH. In order to use PhotoEditor SDK inside one of your products, you will need a valid a license.
yarn add vue-pesdk photoeditorsdk react react-dom styled-components
or
npm i -D vue-pesdk photoeditorsdk react react-dom styled-components
react
, react-dom
and styled-components
are peerDependencies and are needed to render the PhotoEditorSDK UI.
In addition you need the PhotoEditor SDK assets. You can either get them here or copy it from your node_modules
into your public asset folder. And set the assetBaseUrl
prop to this folder.
cp -r node_modules/photoeditorsdk/assets/ ~/projects/your-project/public/assets
If needed, take a look at the official documentation for further information.
Import the PhotoEditor SDK css styles and the vue-sdk component.
<template>
<PhotoEditor
asset-path="/static"
license='{"owner": ...}'
image-path="/static/example.jpg"
/>
</template>
<script>
import PhotoEditor from 'vue-pesdk';
export default {
components: { PhotoEditor }
};
</script>
prop | default | type | required | description |
---|---|---|---|---|
layout | 'advanced' | String | no | Select if you want to use the Advanced or Basic UI. Supported values are advanced and basic . |
theme | 'dark' | String | no | Select if you want to use the Dark or Light Theme. Supported values are dark and light . |
license | '' | String | yes | Your PhotoEditorSDK license. Get it here |
imagePath | '' | String | yes | Path to the image that will be rendered initially |
assetPath | 'assets' | String | yes | Path to your assets. Where the PhotoEditorSDK assets are stored |
options | Object | no |
The idea behind this wrapper is to simplify the usage of the PhotoEditor SDK inside Vue. We try to minimize the configuration and maximize the possibilities.
Because of that you have only 3 important and required props, license
, imagePath
and assetPath
to get the editor running.
However, you have to either download or copy the PhotoEditor SDK assets to your public asset folder. You can either get them here or copy them from your node_modules
.
If you need more configuration possibilities, you can pass all the mentioned options to the options
prop.
Furthermore, the editor instance is saved as a Vue Instance Property so you can access the editor instance inside your parent component with this.$pesdk
after the editor is mounted.
<template>
<PhotoEditor
:license="$options.license",
asset-path="/assets"
image-path="/assets/example.jpg"
/>
</template>
<script>
import PhotoEditor from 'vue-pesdk'
import PesdkLicense from './myLicense.json'
export default {
components: { PhotoEditor },
license: JSON.stringify(PesdkLicense)
}
You can listen to various events in the PhotoEditorSdk
You can simply attach an .on()
event to the editor instance.
<template>
<PhotoEditor
:license="$options.license"
asset-path="/assets"
image-path="/assets/example.jpg"
/>
</template>
<script>
import PhotoEditor from 'vue-pesdk'
import PesdkLicense from './myLicense.json'
export default {
components: { PhotoEditor },
license: JSON.stringify(PesdkLicense), // This is optional way to store non-reactive data in vue.
mounted () {
this.$pesdk.on('export', (result) => {
console.log('User clicked export, resulting image / dataurl:')
console.log(result)
})
}
}
Like mentioned earlier you can pass in all configuration options like here.
<template>
<PhotoEditor
asset-path="/assets"
:license="$options.license"
:options="options"
image-path="/assets/example.jpg"
/>
</template>
<script>
import PhotoEditor from 'vue-pesdk'
import PesdkLicense from './myLicense.json'
export default {
components: { PhotoEditor },
license: JSON.strigify(PesdkLicense), // This is optional.
data: () => ({
options: {
controlsOptions: {
focus: {
availableModes: ['radial', 'mirrored', 'linear', 'gaussian']
}
}
}
})
}
Details changes for each release are documented in the CHANGELOG.md.
# install dependencies
npm install
# serve with hot reload at localhost:8080
npm run dev
# build for production with minification
npm run build
# run unit tests
npm run unit
# run e2e tests
npm run e2e
# run all tests
npm test
For a detailed explanation on how things work, check out the guide and docs for vue-loader.
Please see LICENSE for licensing details.
Please see CONTRIBUTORS for licensing details.
For support requests, please use our Support Desk.