Video.js 5's Fluid Mode and Playlist Picker
Tech Talk
How Fluid Mode Works
In video.js 5.0, we added support for truly fluid layouts with video.js. It's done by using intrinsic ratios, video.js does the heavy lifting for you.
How to Use Fluid Mode
To make a player fluid in video.js, you can either set the fluid
option:
let player = videojs('preview-player', {
fluid: true
})
Or you can add one of the fluid classes to the player: .vjs-fluid
, .vjs-4-3
, .vjs-16-9
:
<video id="preview-player" class="video-js vjs-fluid" controls data-setup={}>
.vjs-4-3
maintains a 4:3 aspect ratio for the video and .vjs-16-9
maintains a 16:9 one. .vjs-fluid
is a bit more special. It waits for the video metadata to load and then uses the video width and video height to calculate the correct aspect ratio to use for the video.
Playlist Picker
This works great if you only have the player by itself. What if you are trying to a attach a playlist to the video element and keep it at the same height—like we did on the advanced example page on the video.js website?
We could calculate how much the padding top should be depending on the width of the playlist picker or the container element but then each time a video changes we would need to recalculate the height of the playlist picker. Instead, we can rely on video.js to do all the work.
Attaching the Playlist Picker
For this example, We’re using the videojs-playlist-ui and videojs-playlist plugins for the playlist functionality. We then wrap the player in a container and put the playlist-ui
element in there as well.
<section class="main-preview-player">
<video id="preview-player" class="video-js vjs-fluid" controls preload="auto" crossorigin="anonymous">
<p class="vjs-no-js">To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that <a href="http://videojs.com/html5-video-support/" target="_blank">supports HTML5 video</a></p>
</video>
<ol class="vjs-playlist"></ol>
</section>
Now we can relatively quickly make them align together with some CSS:
.video-js {
width: 70%;
float: left;
}
.vjs-playlist {
width: 30%;
float: right;
}
How to Make the Playlist Picker Fluid
Video.js calculates the aspect ratio and then adds a stylesheet to the page:
.preview-player-dimensions.vjs-fluid {
padding-top: 41.66666666666667%;
}
That percentage results in a 2.4 aspect ratio which matches that of the oceans clip.
So to make sure that the playlist picker is the same height, we can just add the player dimensions class to it:
<ol class="vjs-playlist preview-player-dimensions vjs-fluid"></ol>
How to Make It Line Up
One of the easiest ways of making these two things line up correctly is to use flexbox. It’ll make the player and playlist picker grow to fill up as much space as needed. Also, the playlist picker collapse underneath the player if the width of the page is too small.
Flexbox is available on a lot of platforms. However, some browsers were implementing flexbox as the specification for it was evolving. It’s probably best to run this css through something like autoprefixer. Using autoprefixer won’t make it work on browsers that don’t support flexbox but will significantly increase platform support.
First, we set display
to flex
and add some properties for wrapping and sizing:
.main-preview-player {
display: flex;
flex-wrap: wrap;
justify-content: space-between;
}
flex-wrap
allows playlist picker to wrap to the next line if the width of the container is too small.
Then we want to position the player and playlist picker relative to the container and set some default and minimum sizes:
.video-js,
.vjs-playlist {
position: relative;
min-width: 300px;
min-height: 150px;
height: 0;
}
And finally, we want to apply the flex setting to the player and playlist picker:
.video-js {
flex: 3 1 70%;
}
.vjs-playlist {
flex: 1 1 30%;
}
This tells the player to grow and take up 3x the space as the playlist picker and defaults to 70% of the width. The playlist picker itself defaults to 30% of the width and is allowed to grow and shrink as necessary.
Now if we load this in a browser we see a problem: The playlist isn’t the right height.
This is because the playlist-ui plugin sets its own padding on the element that ends up overriding the preview-player-dimensions
padding-top
. We can fix this by forcing the padding-top
we want. However, while this solves our height problem, where are our items? You need to scroll to get them.
This happens because our padding-top
is inside the playlist picker; it pushed all the elements down requiring scrolling to get to them.
Solution
Ultimately, what we need to do is wrap the playlist element in a container that flexes so that the padding-top
doesn’t push the playlist items down.
<div class="playlist-container preview-player-dimensions vjs-fluid">
<ol class="vjs-playlist"></ol>
</div>
We also change the vjs-playlist
references to playlist-container
and absolutely position the playlist picker inside its container:
.playlist-container {
position: relative;
min-width: 300px;
min-height: 150px;
height: 0;
}
.playlist-container {
flex: 1 1 30%;
}
.vjs-playlist {
margin: 0;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
}
HTML
<section class="main-preview-player">
<video id="preview-player" class="video-js vjs-fluid" controls preload="auto" crossorigin="anonymous">
<p class="vjs-no-js">To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that <a href="http://videojs.com/html5-video-support/" target="_blank">supports HTML5 video</a></p>
</video>
<div class="playlist-container preview-player-dimensions vjs-fluid">
<ol class="vjs-playlist"></ol>
</div>
</section>
CSS
.main-preview-player {
display: flex;
flex-wrap: wrap;
justify-content: space-between;
}
.video-js,
.playlist-container {
position: relative;
min-width: 300px;
min-height: 150px;
height: 0;
}
.video-js {
flex: 3 1 70%;
}
.playlist-container {
flex: 1 1 30%;
}
.vjs-playlist {
margin: 0;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
}