There are more answers in this SO post. Unfortunately I cannot find a "real" solution, but other people are replacing the page overlay CSS (#fancybox-overlay) to include a spinner. Then when the iframe'd page eventually loads it's placed over the spinner.
EDIT:
I gave up on using fancybox to handle the loading image and thought I'd share my solution. I added an absolutely positioned loading gif
of my own to the page, show it just before calling fancybox and I can capture the iframe loaded event with JQuery to hide the spinner, like so:
$( "#progressIcon" ).show();
$.fancybox.open( { type: "iframe", minWidth: 990, minHeight: 690, href: URL, title: "Basket" } );
$( "iframe" ).load( function ()
{
$( "#progressIcon" ).hide();
} );
if you're not calling fancybox manually like I am, I assume you could just as easily attach this code through a click event, i.e:
$('.fancybox').fancybox();
$('.fancybox').click( /* ... */ );
I've also noticed while playing in the fancybox (v2.0.6) source that it looks like fancybox uses the load event to show/hide the loading animation if autoSize is used with an iFrame, though I haven't tested the theory.
if (type === 'iframe' && current.autoSize) {
F.showLoading();
F._setDimension();
F.inner.css('overflow', current.scrolling);
content.bind({
onCancel : function() {
$(this).unbind();
F._afterZoomOut();
},
load : function() {
F.hideLoading();
try {
if (this.contentWindow.document.location) {
F.current.height = $(this).contents().find('body').height();
}
} catch (e) {
F.current.autoSize = false;
}
F[ F.isOpen ? '_afterZoomIn' : '_beforeShow']();
}
}).appendTo(F.inner);
} else {
F.inner.append(content);
F._beforeShow();
}