A vue h5p component for displaying H5P content standalone, inspired by tunapanda/h5p-standalone.
npm install vue-h5p
or
yarn add vue-h5p
in your component:
<template>
<h5p src="path/to/h5p-content" :l10n="translations" @xapi="handleXAPIEvent">
Loading...
<template #error>
Resource not available. :(
</template>
</h5p>
</template>
<script>
import h5p from 'vue-h5p'
import translations from './translations'
export default {
components: {
h5p
},
computed: {
translations () {
return translations
}
},
methods: {
handleXAPIEvent (ev) {
console.log('H5P emitted X-API event')
}
}
}
</script>
The component accepts the following props:
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
copy | no | Boolean | false | Enable copy button |
copyright | no | Boolean | false | Enable copyright button |
css | no | String | '' | Inject css into a <style> in the iframe |
embed | no | String | '' | Set embedCode and enable embed button |
export | no | String | '' | Set exportUrl and enable export button |
fullscreen | no | Boolean | false | Enable fullscreen button |
icon | no | Boolean | false | Enable H5P icon |
l10n | no | Object | {} | UI translations |
resize | no | String | '' | Set resizeCode |
src | yes | String | - | Path to the h5p content |
actor | no | Object | - | Set actor for emitted xAPI statements |
See Creating your own h5p plugin for translation strings.
NOTE: UI translations are not reactive. You have to manually trigger a rerender for translation changes to take effect (e.g. by binding :key to your locale).
All events emitted by H5P are emitted by vue-h5p, event names are the H5P event type, payload is the event data.
Besides that we emit an "ready" event when H5P signals that its loaded, and "height-changed" events (with the new height as integer argument), whenever H5P resize the iframe.
You can use the default slot to render a placeholder while the content is loading.
The named slot "error" is rendered if a request to get the h5p JSON files fails, the slot-scope provides failed request as "error" object.
You can inject custom CSS into the H5P iframe by using the css
prop.
<h5p
src="path/to/h5p-content"
:css="`
.class-in-the-iframe {
background-color: #fff;
}
`"
/>
The actor prop can be set to either a combination of name and email adress or to a combination of name and homePage, according to the xAPI specs.
{
name: 'John Doe',
mail: 'john.doe@example.com'
}
{
name: 'account-id',
homePage: 'https://example.com'
}
Put your extracted h5p content into example/public/h5p, files are served by vue-dev-server.
Serve the example using
yarn serve
Write code, commit changes using conventional commits.
Prepare release with
yarn pre-version