Angular screenfull is a wrapper around the Screenfull library, that allows you to use the HTML5 fullscreen API, in "the Angular way".
You can see the API documentation with some demo examples.
$ npm install --save angular-screenfull
<script src="node_modules/screenfull/dist/screenfull.js"></script>
<script src="node_modules/angular-screenfull/dist/angular-screenfull.min.js"></script>
You need to have both screenfull and angular-screenfull loaded in the browser in order to the directive to work. I have a an agular.js project using a custom loader, but if you want to add webpack support, PR's are welcomed.
angular.module('myModule', ['angularScreenfull']);
In its simplest form, you can do something like this
<div ngsf-fullscreen>
<p>This is a fullscreen element</p>
<button ngsf-toggle-fullscreen>Toggle fullscreen</button>
</div>
The ngsf-fullscreen
indicates which element is going to be the fullscreen element and the ngsf-toggle-fullscreen
will toggle the fullscren when clicked.
Note that you can have multiple ngsf-fullscreen
elements living side by side, the other directives will use the closest parent controller.
When the element that uses directive ngsf-fullscreen
becomes fullscreen a class is added using the $animation
service, so you can add animations to the transition.
Note that this library doesn't come with any CSS, so if you would like your element to occupy the whole screen (and I imagine that you want to), you should add something like this to your CSS.
.fullscreen {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
You can also expose the element controller trough its directive name. So for example you can achieve the same result using this
<div ngsf-fullscreen="fullscreenCtrl">
<p>This is another fullscreen element</p>
<button ng-click="fullscreenCtrl.toggleFullscreen()">Toggle fullscreen</button>
</div>
We also provide directives to show the elements based on the fullscreen status, so for example you can have this
<div ngsf-fullscreen>
<p>This is yet another fullscreen element</p>
<a ngsf-toggle-fullscreen show-if-fullscreen-enabled>
<i show-if-fullscreen=false>Icon for enter fullscreen</i>
<i show-if-fullscreen=true>Icon for exit fullscreen</i>
</a>
</div>
As stated in this bug, it appears that browser vendors don't allow a user script to tap into the F11
hotkey for security reasons. That means that we can only detect that the page is in fullscreen mode when the HTML5 fullscreen API
is used.
If you can find a way to overcome this problem please let me know!