Skeleton
KSkeleton is used as a placeholder component while the primary content is still loading.
Props
type
There are 7 different types of loading states that KSkeleton supports: card
, table
, form
, spinner
, fullscreen-kong
, fullscreen-generic
, and a generic loading state. Defaults to a generic loading state. The following example shows a form
type KSKeleton.
<KSkeleton type="form" />
delayMilliseconds
The number of milliseconds to wait before showing the skeleton state. Defaults to 0
.
<KComponent :data="{ isLoading: false }" v-slot="{ data }">
<KInputSwitch v-model="data.isLoading" label="Loading" />
<div v-if="!data.isLoading">
<div>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.</div>
</div>
<KSkeleton v-else="data.isLoading" delay-milliseconds="200" />
</KComponent>
Generic Loading State
By default, KSkeleton will load a generic loading state. There are no props for this state.
<KSkeleton />
Card Loading State
This loading state is using for card type components, like KCard or similar.
<KSkeleton type="card" />
cardCount
Used for displaying the number of cards in this loading state. Defaults to 1. The following example shows 3 cards.
<KSkeleton :card-count="2" type="card" />
cardMaxWidth
Prop to specify width of each card. If not specified, KSkeleton will try to size them automatically in order to fit a maximum of 3 cards in a row without wrapping. If cardCount
is 1
(or not specified) the maximum width a card will span is 470px
.
<KSkeleton card-max-width="100%" type="card" />
Form Loading State
This loading state is used for form type components. There are no props for this state.
<KSkeleton type="form" />
Table Loading State
This loading state is used for table type components.
<KSkeleton type="table" />
tableRows
Used for displaying the number of rows in this loading state. Defaults to 6. The following example shows 3 rows.
<KSkeleton type="table" :table-rows="3" />
tableColumns
Used for displaying the number of columns in this loading state. Defaults to 6. The following example shows 3 columns.
<KSkeleton type="table" :table-columns="3" />
Spinner Loading State
This loading state is used for a spinner, which can be used for a wide variety of situations. There are no props for this state.
<KSkeleton type="spinner" />
Full Screen Loading State
The full screen loading state is used to display a full screen loader typically during initial render of an app to avoid any FOUC (Flash Of Unstyled Content) while the app tries to figure out if you are able to access the route and also to perform any expensive querying on first load.
progress
Used for controlling the progress indicator.
hideProgress
Defaults to false
, you can use this prop to hide the progress indicator.
zIndex
Defaults to 10500
, you can use this prop to control the z-index
value of the full-screen skeleton container
<KButton @click="onClickNoProgress">Click for no progress indicator</KButton>
<KButton @click="onClick">Click for default progress behavior</KButton>
<KSkeleton
v-if="loadingNone"
:delay-milliseconds="0"
hide-progress
type="fullscreen-kong"
/>
<KSkeleton
v-if="loading"
:delay-milliseconds="0"
type="fullscreen-generic"
/>
<template>
<KButton @click="onClickProgress">Click me to simulate progress manually</KButton>
<KSkeleton
v-if="loadingManually"
:delay-milliseconds="0"
:progress="progress"
type="fullscreen-kong"
/>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
const loadingManually = ref(false)
const progress = ref(0)
const onClickProgress = () => {
progress.value = 0
loadingManually.value = true
const interval = setInterval(() => {
progress.value = progress.value + 20
if (progress.value >= 100) {
loadingManually.value = false
clearInterval(interval)
}
}, 500)
}
</script>
KSkeletonBox
KSkeleton package uses a component to render the placeholder content <KSkeletonBox>
. It can be used as a component primitive to create your own custom placeholder components.
Box Props
width
Width of the skeleton box in relative units. Values 10
, 50
, 75
, 100
are percentage-based.
Accepted values: 1
(default), 2
, 5
, 6
, 10
, 50
, 75
, 100
.
height
Height of the skeleton box in relative units.
Accepted values: 1
(default), 2
.
<KSkeletonBox />
<KSkeletonBox width="2" height="2"/>
<KSkeletonBox width="5" height="2"/>
<KSkeletonBox width="50" height="1"/>
<KSkeletonBox width="100" height="2"/>
For example, here is a card skeleton with different arrangement of placeholders:
<KSkeleton type="card" :card-count="2">
<template #card-header>
<div>
<div>
<KSkeletonBox width="5" />
</div>
<hr>
</div>
</template>
<template #card-footer>
<div>
<div>
<KSkeletonBox width="5" />
</div>
</div>
</template>
</KSkeleton>
And another example:
<template>
<KSkeleton type="card">
<template #card-header>
<div>
<div>
<KSkeletonBox width="5" />
</div>
<hr>
</div>
</template>
<template #card-content>
<div>
<template v-for="i in 8">
<KSkeletonBox width="5" />
<KSkeletonBox width="5" />
<KSkeletonBox width="1" />
<KSkeletonBox width="2" />
</template>
</div>
</template>
<template #card-footer>
<KSkeletonBox width="100" />
</template>
</KSkeleton>
</template>