Summary
Homepage:
http://daneden.me/animate
Author(s): Daniel Eden
Version: 3.7.0
A cross-browser library of CSS animations.
Usage
To start using animate.css you need to load it into the page using
%JQREQUIRE{"animate"}%
. There are two ways to make use of this library.
Direct use of animate.css
The only thing required to animate a DOM node is to add css classes to it:
- Add the class
animated
to the element you want to animate
- Add the class
infinite
in case that you also want it to be aninated in an infinite loop
- Add the class of the animation as listed below
Use via jqAnimateCSS
This is a small convenience wrapper that adds a bit more control over the kind of animation, i.e. in addition to the direct name of the effect
you may also choose a random effect or one of a group of effects:
- Add the class
jqAnimateCSS
to the element to animate
- Add HTML5 data parameters
Parameter |
Description |
Default |
data-effect="..." |
either an effect name as listed below, or the name of an effect group to chose a random effect from, or the string random for a random effect among all known ones, or a comma separated list of effects |
|
data-infinite="true/false |
switch on/off an infinite effect loop |
false |
Whenever sending the element a
refresh
signal will the effect be repeated, or another one will be chosen among the set of effects configured.
You type:
<h3 id="myElem" class="jqAnimateCSS foswikiCenter" data-effect="attentionSeekers">Hello World</h3>
%BUTTON{"Refresh" onclick="jQuery('#myElem').trigger('refresh')"}%
You get:
Hello World
Refresh
Javascript API
A
jqAnimateCSS
element will be initialized by an
animateCSS
javascript object which takes over control of the animation as well as offers a few methods that come in handy when dealing with animations.
You may access the
animateCSS
instance of a
jqAnimateCSS
element using
jQuery.data()
method:
jQuery(function($) {
var elemCtrl = $("#myElem").data("animateCSS");
elemCtrl.animate().then(function() {
console.log("animation finished");
});
$("#myElem").on("start", function() {
console.log("the animation started");
});
$("#myElem").on("stop", function() {
console.log("the animation ended");
});
});
The
.animate()
method may be used to start the animation. It returns a promise that will be resolved once the animation finished.
Events
The element controller fires two events:
-
start
: fired right before the animation starts
-
stop
: triggered once the animation finished
The
stop
event is provided in addition to the different browser events fired when a css animation stopped.
So listening on an
animateCSS
element via
$("#myElem").on("finish", function() {...})
is equivalent to the much more complicated standard way
$("#myElem").on("animationend webkitAnimationEnd MSAnimationEnd oAnimationEnd mozAnimationEnd oanimationend", function() {
...
});
to cover all browsers.
Effects
Group |
Effects |
zoomingExits |
zoomOut, zoomOutDown, zoomOutLeft, zoomOutRight, zoomOutUp |
zoomingEntrances |
zoomIn, zoomInDown, zoomInLeft, zoomInRight, zoomInUp |
slidingExits |
slideOutDown, slideOutLeft, slideOutRight, slideOutUp |
slidingEntrances |
slideInDown, slideInLeft, slideInRight, slideInUp |
rotatingExits |
rotateOut, rotateOutDownLeft, rotateOutDownRight, rotateOutUpLeft, rotateOutUpRight |
rotatingEntrances |
rotateIn, rotateInDownLeft, rotateInDownRight, rotateInUpLeft, rotateInUpRight |
lightspeed |
lightSpeedIn, lightSpeedOut |
specials |
hinge, jackInTheBox, rollIn, rollOut |
flippers |
flip, flipInX, flipInY, flipOutX, flipOutY |
fadingExits |
fadeOut, fadeOutDown, fadeOutDownBig, fadeOutLeft, fadeOutLeftBig, fadeOutRight, fadeOutRightBig, fadeOutUp, fadeOutUpBig |
fadingEntrances |
fadeIn, fadeInDown, fadeInDownBig, fadeInLeft, fadeInLeftBig, fadeInRight, fadeInRightBig, fadeInUp, fadeInUpBig |
bouncingExits |
bounceOut, bounceOutDown, bounceOutLeft, bounceOutRight, bounceOutUp |
bouncingEntrances |
bounceIn, bounceInDown, bounceInLeft, bounceInRight, bounceInUp |
attentionSeekers |
bounce, flash, headShake, jello, pulse, rubberBand, shake, swing, tada, wobble |