dom-animate

Dead-simple helper function to do animations in DOM or other environments. Bezier curve support. Animations respect clock. Pause, resume, and cancel. Custom timing and render functions.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import domAnimate from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/dom-animate';
</script>

README

dom-animate

Dead-simple helper function to perform any animation in the DOM or other environments.

Features:

  • Really small filesize, only 1 dependency (~2.5KB uncompressed, including dependency).
  • Straightforward, simple API.
  • Supports Beizer Curves and custom easing functions, with predefined values.
  • Custom timing function (uses RAF by default if available)
  • Pause/resume/stop/restart animations.
  • Supports delays that still work with pause/resume/stop/restart.
  • Animations respect the actual clock, so no matter the frame rate, the animation will still properly last the appropriate amount of time.
  • Lambda render functions.

Installation

NPM:

npm i dom-animate

browser:

You can use either dom-animate.umd.js or dom-animate.min.umd.js from the latest release in a script tag. This includes all dependencies.

<script src="dom-animate.min.umd.js"></script>
<script>
    let el = document.querySelector('.myElement');

    let animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 200, (x) => {
      el.style.height = x + 'px';
    });
</script>

Example Usage

const DOMAnimate = require('dom-animate');
const el = document.querySelector('.myElement');

//animate height from 0 to 200 with all defaults
const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 200, x => {
  el.style.height = x + 'px';
});

//animate scale (with cross-browser support) from 1 to 2 with some options
const animation = new DOMAnimate(1, 2, x => {
  el.style.transform = `scale(${x}, ${x})`;
  el.style.webkitTransform = `scale(${x}, ${x})`;
}, {
  duration: 200,
  easing: [0.42, 0.0, 0.58, 1.0],
  onComplete: () => alert('done!')
});

//animate with pre-defined easing constant
const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 200, x => {
  el.style.height = x + 'px';
}, {
  easing: DOMAnimate.EASING.LINEAR
});

//stops animation. `play() or resume()` both play from the beginning.
animation.stop();

//restarts animation after stopping
animation.play();

//pauses animation
animation.pause();

//resumes animation after pausing
animation.resume();

//don't animate right away. create animation object, then play after 1s
const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 200, x => {
  el.style.height = x + 'px';
}, {
  autoplay: false
});
setTimeout(animation.play, 1000);

//provide a custom timing function instead of the default `window.requestAnimationFrame`
//in this example, it tries to render at exactly 24fps
const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 200, (x) => {
  el.style.height = x + 'px';
}, {
  timingFunction: callback => { window.setTimeout(callback, 1000 / 24); }
});

Animation with delays

You can think of a delay as just a part of the animation. It is respected by the pause/resume functionality all the same.

const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 1, x => {
    document.getElementById('id').style.opacity = x;
  }, {
    easing: [0.25, 0.46, 0.45, 0.9],
    delay: 1000 //1s
  });

animation.pause(); //delay is paused.
animation.resume(); //delay is resumed

/* without autoplay */

const animation = new DOMAnimate(0, 1, x => {
    document.getElementById('id').style.opacity = x;
  }, {
    easing: [0.25, 0.46, 0.45, 0.9],
    delay: 1000, //1s
    autoplay: false
  });

animation.play(); //delay starts now, along with rest of animation

API

constructor({number} start, {number} end, {function} lamda, {object=} options)

{int} start

The start value of the animation.

{int} end

The end value of the animation.

{function} lambda({number} x)

The function that sets the styles on frame update. x is a number that represents the current frame's animation value.

{object=} options

An optional map of parameters:

{boolean} autoplay

If true, the animation will start as soon as animation() is called. [Default: true]

{integer} duration

Animation duration in milliseconds. (Default: 400)

{array} easing

An array to pass to the cubic-bezier easing function. (Default: Animator.EASE_IN_OUT)

{function} onComplete

A callback function that is called when the animation is finished.

{function} timingFunction

Lambda function that is used to call the tick() method. By default, if in a browser environment, this will be window.requestAnimationFrame, window.webkitRequestAnimationFrame, etc. If your environment doesn't support these methods, and you don't provide your own, a default timing function will be used that is called at 60fps.

play()

Starts the animation.

stop()

Ends any current animation.

pause()

Pauses any current animation.

resume()

Resumes any current animation.

Constants

EASING

dom-animate ships with a small Bezier Curve library:

  • EASING.EASE
  • EASING.EASE_IN
  • EASING.EASE_OUT
  • EASING.EASE_IN_OUT
  • EASING.LINEAR

Additional Resources

License

MIT. Free to use in all your things!

Contribution

DO IT! PR's welcome. Need to add testing and linting.