This Jekyll plugin makes it very easy to send larger images to devices with high pixel densities.
The plugin adds an image_tag
Liquid tag that can be used like this:
{% image_tag src="/image.png" width="100" %}
This will generate the right images and output something like:
<img src="/image-100x50.png" srcset="/image-100x50.png 1x, /image-200x100.png 2x, /image-300x150.png 3x" width="100">
Add this line to your Gemfile:
gem 'jekyll-srcset'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install jekyll-srcset
Then add the gem to your Jekyll _config.yml
:
gems:
- jekyll-srcset
Use it like this in any Liquid template:
{% image_tag src="/image.png" width="100" %}
You must specify either a width
or a height
, but never both. The width or height will be used to determine the smallest version of the image to use (for 1x pixel density devices). Based on this minimum size, the plugin will generate up to 3 versions of the image, one that matches the dimension specified, one that's twice the size and one that's 3 times the size. The plugin never upscales an image.
The plugin sets these as a srcset attribute on the final image tag, and modern browsers will then use this information to determine which version of the image to load based on the pixel density of the device (and in the future, potentially based on bandwidth or user settings).
This makes it a really straight forward way to serve the right size of image in all modern browsers and in works fine in older browsers without any polyfill (there's not a lot of high pixel density devices out there that runs old browsers, so simply serving the smallest version to the ones that don't understand srcset is fine).
To use variables for the image or the dimensions, simply leave out the quotes:
{% image_tag src=page.cover_image height=page.cover_image_height %}
If you have optipng
installed and in your PATH, you can tell the plugin to run it on all generated png images.
Just add:
srcset:
optipng: true
To your _config.yml
Currently the plugin doesn't optimize other image formats, except for stripping color palettes.
Optimizing and resizing can take a while for some images. You can specify a cache folder in your Jekyll config to let jekyll-srcset cache images between runs.
srcset:
cache: "/tmp/images"
git checkout -b my-new-feature
)git commit -am 'Add some feature'
)git push origin my-new-feature
)This plugin is developed by netlify, the premium hosting for static websites.
You can use netlify if you're using custom plugins with your Jekyll sites. When you push to git, netlify will build your Jekyll site and deploy the result to a global CDN, while handling asset fingerprinting, caching headers, bundling, minification and true instant cache invalidation. A 1-click operation with no other setup needed.