I'm showing images from resources/static/images/
The weird thing is if I give the path like "/images/milk.png", it shows the image but if I get name from ${}, it doesn't work.
<img class="card-img-top"
th:src="#{/images/${res.getLogo().getUploadFileName()}}"
th:alt="${res.getLogo().getUploadFileName()}" />
it seems res.getLogo().getUploadFileName() is working well. So it will be replaced like /images/milk.png. But it doesn't show the image...
How can I fix this?
One more thing, I know basic Thymleaf path is resources/templates, but how it recognize image when I gave like "/images/milk.png"
If u want to upload static images
th:src="#{images/} + ${res.logo.uploadFileName}"
if you want to upload dynamic images
th:src="#{https://~~~.com/} + ${id}
I want to display an image in my VuePress markdown file. Normally, I'd go with:
![My Image](./resources/myimg.png)
However, I'd like to create a custom Vue component that will style the images in a specific way. Then, some images would be displayed using the "standard" markdown syntax (like above), and some others using my custom component.
With my custom component, I'd display the images like this:
<MyComponent src="./resources/myimg.png"/>
As you can see, the images are placed alongside my markdowns, in a resources directory. This makes sense for me, because the image is close to the markdown where it gets displayed.
Unfortunately, the image does not get displayed when I use MyComponent. VuePress (webpack?) handles the images during build and places them in some other directory with a different name. The "standard" Markdown image reference works fine, its URL to the image is set up correctly by VuePress. However, MyComponent does not work, because the src parameter is just a string for VuePress and it does not transform it in any way.
I know that one solution would be to place my images in the /vuepress/public folder. However, I would want to keep the same organization as I have now - images alongside documents.
How can I achieve that?
I had the same issue.
I used the answer #papey provides for a Vue question here
Here is one thing he suggests
<template>
<div id="app">
<img :src="require('./assets/logo.png')"/>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
}
</script>
<style lang="css">
</style>
As a back-end for vue.js I use laravel (port 8000)
In my db I have the user and the name of it's profile photo (this.user.photo).
So, I want to show this photo.
<img :src="require(`http://localhost:8000/images/${this.user.photo}`)" alt="Profile Photo">
When I go to http://localhost:8000/images/1.png I actually see the image, but the Vue says:
Module not found: Error: Can't resolve 'http://localhost:8000'
PS: console.log(this.user.photo) outputs 1.png
UPD: I've seen many solutions, like this or this, but they do not work
Looks like your images are already hosted on the server and you are not bundling them during build. In this case, you need not use require and directly refer to your images in the template as
<img :src="'http://localhost:8000/images/' + user.photo" alt="Profile Photo">
Remember that require is a method provided by webpack to resolve your dependancy URLs during build such that you need not worry about the absolute URLs. require helps us refer to URLs relative to the modules which are resolved by webpack during build.
In short, use require when you have static assets inside your Vue project module
You can call the image directly with path if the image is not in public path
<img :src=`../../images/${user.photo}` alt="Profile Photo">
This will build image in the path where the compiling the JS and the image public path will automatically added.
If you're trying to add image from public path, you can initialise the origin path in the data section and call the image like follows
data:()=>{
return {
path: document.location.origin
}
}
<img :src=`${path}/images/${user.photo}` alt="Profile Photo">
Note: you don't need to use this in the template section.
You should use require and point to the image.
Make sure that the path is relative to the module that uses it.
Write a function to return the image URL
var app = new Vue({
el: '#app',
methods: {
getPicture() {
return 'https://vuejs.org/images/logo.png'
}
}
})
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/vue/2.5.17/vue.js"></script>
<div id="app">
<img :src="getPicture()" alt="Profile Photo">
</div>
This is for a small school assignment.
We are trying to create and deploy a search website of local cricket players.
I have everything running locally the only thing is I need to use is asset on my images to get them to deploy properly.
currently I have in my local
<img src="/images/{{$player['image']}}" class="playerimg">
I have tried concatenating it but to no avail.
The reason I have a variable $player is because we are pulling data from two tables and looping around the array.
Any help would be greatly appreciated
Edit: Solved Thank you all for your help ! code below
<img src="{{ asset('images/'.$player['image']) }}" class="playerimg">
Laravel - Helpers: asset()
https://laravel.com/docs/master/helpers#method-asset
<img src="{{ asset('images/'.$player['image']) }}" class="playerimg">
There are several ways to display the image.
I'm assuming index.php in public folder.
asset() Generates a URL to an application asset (code)
Use for files that are directly served such as CSS, images, javascript.
Only accepts a direct path.
{{ asset('images/'.$player['image']) }}
// http://www.example.com/public/images/abc.png
If you stored your image in storage folder then,
<img src="{{ storage_path('images/'.$player['image']) }}">
Make sure config.php should be configured properly for storage_path.
I have installed React using create-react-app. It installed fine, but I am trying to load an image in one of my components (Header.js, file path: src/components/common/Header.js) but it's not loading. Here is my code:
import React from 'react';
export default () => {
var logo1 = (
<img
//src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/codecademy-content/courses/React/react_photo-goose.jpg"
src={'/src/images/logo.png'}
alt="Canvas Logo"
/>
);
return (
<div id="header-wrap">
<div className="container clearfix">
<div id="primary-menu-trigger">
<i className="icon-reorder"></i>
</div>
<div id="logo">
<a href="/" className="standard-logo" data-dark-logo='/images/logo-dark.png'>{logo1}</a>
<a href="/" className="retina-logo" data-dark-logo='/images/logo-dark#2x.png'>
<img src='/var/www/html/react-demo/src/images/logo#2x.png' alt="Canvas Logo" />
</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
);
}
If I write the image path as src={require('./src/images/logo.png')} in my logo1 variable, it gives the error:
Failed to compile.
Error in ./src/Components/common/Header.js
Module not found: ./src/images/logo.png in /var/www/html/wistful/src/Components/common
Please help me solve this. Let me know what I am doing wrong here.
If you have questions about creating React App I encourage you to read its User Guide.
It answers this and many other questions you may have.
Specifically, to include a local image you have two options:
Use imports:
// Assuming logo.png is in the same folder as JS file
import logo from './logo.png';
// ...later
<img src={logo} alt="logo" />
This approach is great because all assets are handled by the build system and will get filenames with hashes in the production build. You’ll also get an error if the file is moved or deleted.
The downside is it can get cumbersome if you have hundreds of images because you can’t have arbitrary import paths.
Use the public folder:
// Assuming logo.png is in public/ folder of your project
<img src={process.env.PUBLIC_URL + '/logo.png'} alt="logo" />
This approach is generally not recommended, but it is great if you have hundreds of images and importing them one by one is too much hassle. The downside is that you have to think about cache busting and watch out for moved or deleted files yourself.
If you want load image with a local relative URL as you are doing. React project has a default public folder. You should put your images folder inside. It will work.
In React or any Javascript modules that internally use Webpack, if the src attribute value of img is given as a path in string format as given below
e.g. <img src={'/src/images/logo.png'} /> or <img src='/src/images/logo.png' />
then during build, the final HTML page built contains src='/src/images/logo.png'. This path is not read during build time, but is read during rendering in browser. At the rendering time, if the logo.png is not found in the /src/images directory, then the image would not render. If you open the console in browser, you can see the 404 error for the image. I believe you meant to use ./src directory instead of /src directory. In that case, the development directory ./src is not available to the browser. When the page is loaded in browser only the files in the 'public' directory are available to the browser. So, the relative path ./src is assumed to be public/src directory and if the logo.png is not found in public/src/images/ directory, it would not render the image.
So, the solution for this problem is either to put your image in the public directory and reference the relative path from public directory or use import or require keywords in React or any Javascript module to inform the Webpack to read this path during build phase and include the image in the final build output. The details of both these methods has been elaborated by Dan Abramov in his answer, please refer to it or use the link: https://create-react-app.dev/docs/adding-images-fonts-and-files/
There are lot of good answers here and more expert opinions than myself. But I will just share my experience and what worked for me.
I was irritated by the fact that there is so much go around just to have a simple inclusion of images. Hence here is what I did-
Create a seperate component (file) myimages.jsx
import image1 from "../img/someimage.png";
import image2 from "../img/otherimage.png";
const ImageData=[image1,image2,image3]
export default ImageData;
I then just imported this ImageData component in the file (component) I as using the images. This way I turned a cpmponent into a 'folder' to get all my images.
Like I said, not an expert but this resolved my frustration with lack of importing images quickly in React.
You have diferent ways to achieve this, here is an example:
import myimage from './...' // wherever is it.
in your img tag just put this into src:
<img src={myimage}...>
You can also check official docs here: https://facebook.github.io/react-native/docs/image.html
In order to load local images to your React.js application, you need to add require parameter in media sections like or Image tags, as below:
image={require('./../uploads/temp.jpg')}
In React.js latest version v17.0.1,
we can not require the local image we have to import it.
like we use to do before = require('../../src/Assets/images/fruits.png');
Now we have to import it like =
import fruits from '../../src/Assets/images/fruits.png';
Before React V17.0.1 we can use require(../) and it is working fine.
Instead of use img src="", try to create a div and set background-image as the image you want.
Right now it's working for me.
example:
App.js
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import './App.css';
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<div className="myImage"> </div>
</div>
);
}
}
export default App;
App.css
.myImage {
width: 60px;
height: 60px;
background-image: url("./icons/add-circle.png");
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-size: 100%;
}
Best approach is to import image in js file and use it. Adding images in public folder have some downside:
Files inside public folder not get minified or post-processed,
You can't use hashed name (need to set in webpack config) for images , if you do then you have to change names again and again,
Can't find files at runtime (compilation), result in 404 error at client side.
First, you need to create a folder in src directory then put images you want.
Create a folder structure like
src->images->linechart.png
then import these images in JSX file
import linechart from './../../images/linechart.png';
then you need use in images src like below.
<img src={linechart} alt="piechart" height="400px" width="400px"></img>
We don't need base64, just give your image path and dimensions as shown below.
import Logo from './Logo.png' //local path
var doc = new jsPDF("p", "mm", "a4");
var img = new Image();
img.src = Logo;
doc.addImage(img, 'png', 10, 78, 12, 15)