tsParticles slim bundle loads some of the most used features to
a @tsparticles/engine
instance.
Included Packages
- @tsparticles/basic (and all its dependencies)
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-attract
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-bounce
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-bubble
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-connect
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-grab
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-pause
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-push
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-remove
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-repulse
- @tsparticles/interaction-external-slow
- @tsparticles/interaction-particles-attract
- @tsparticles/interaction-particles-collisions
- @tsparticles/interaction-particles-links
- @tsparticles/move-parallax
- @tsparticles/particles.js
- @tsparticles/plugin-easing-quad
- @tsparticles/shape-image
- @tsparticles/shape-line
- @tsparticles/shape-polygon
- @tsparticles/shape-square
- @tsparticles/shape-star
- @tsparticles/shape-emoji
- @tsparticles/updater-life
- @tsparticles/updater-rotate
- @tsparticles/updater-stroke-color
The CDN/Vanilla version JS has two different files:
- One is a bundle file with all the scripts included in a single file
- One is a file including just the
loadSlim
function to load the tsParticles slim preset, all dependencies must be included manually
Including the tsparticles.slim.bundle.min.js
file will work exactly like v1
, you can start using the tsParticles
instance in the same way.
This is the easiest usage, since it's a single file with the some of the v1
features.
All new features will be added as external packages, this bundle is recommended for migrating from v1
easily.
This installation requires more work since all dependencies must be included in the page. Some lines above are all specified in the Included Packages section.
Once the scripts are loaded you can set up tsParticles
like this:
(async () => {
await loadSlim(tsParticles);
await tsParticles.load({
id: "tsparticles",
options: {
/* options */
},
});
})();
The syntax for React.js
, Preact
and Inferno
is the same.
This sample uses the class component syntax, but you can use hooks as well (if the library supports it).
Class Components
import React from "react";
import Particles from "react-particles";
import type { Engine } from "@tsparticles/engine";
import { loadSlim } from "@tsparticles/slim";
export class ParticlesContainer extends PureComponent<unknown> {
// this customizes the component tsParticles installation
async customInit(engine: Engine) {
// this adds the bundle to tsParticles
await loadSlim(engine);
}
render() {
const options = {
/* custom options */
};
return <Particles options={options} init={this.customInit} />;
}
}
Hooks / Functional Components
import React, { useCallback } from "react";
import Particles from "react-particles";
import type { Engine } from "@tsparticles/engine";
import { loadSlim } from "@tsparticles/slim";
export function ParticlesContainer(props: unknown) {
// this customizes the component tsParticles installation
const customInit = useCallback(async (engine: Engine) => {
// this adds the bundle to tsParticles
await loadSlim(engine);
});
const options = {
/* custom options */
};
return <Particles options={options} init={this.customInit} />;
}
The syntax for Vue.js 2.x
and 3.x
is the same
<Particles id="tsparticles" :particlesInit="particlesInit" :options="options" />
const options = {
/* custom options */
};
async function particlesInit(engine: Engine) {
await loadSlim(engine);
}
<ng-particles [id]="id" [options]="options" [particlesInit]="particlesInit"></ng-particles>
const options = {
/* custom options */
};
async function particlesInit(engine: Engine): void {
await loadSlim(engine);
}
<Particles
id="tsparticles"
options={options}
particlesInit="{particlesInit}"
/>
let options = {
/* custom options */
};
let particlesInit = async (engine) => {
await loadSlim(engine);
};