Triggering transitions You can trigger CSS transitions directly with pseudo classes like :hover (activates when the mouse goes over an element), :focus (activates when a user tabs onto an element, or when a user clicks into an input element), or :active (activates when user clicks on the element).
CSS transitions provide a way to control animation speed when changing CSS properties. Instead of having property changes take effect immediately, you can cause the changes in a property to take place over a period of time.
To trigger an element's transition, toggle a class name on that element that triggers it. To pause an element's transition, use getComputedStyle and getPropertyValue at the point in the transition you want to pause it. Then set those CSS properties of that element equal to those values you just got.
The transition-delay CSS property specifies the duration to wait before starting a property's transition effect when its value changes.
For transitions you can use the following to detect the end of a transition via jQuery:
$("#someSelector").bind("transitionend webkitTransitionEnd oTransitionEnd MSTransitionEnd", function(){ ... });
Mozilla has an excellent reference:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_Transitions/Using_CSS_transitions#Detecting_the_start_and_completion_of_a_transition
For animations it's very similar:
$("#someSelector").bind("animationend webkitAnimationEnd oAnimationEnd MSAnimationEnd", function(){ ... });
Note that you can pass all of the browser prefixed event strings into the bind() method simultaneously to support the event firing on all browsers that support it.
Update:
Per the comment left by Duck: you use jQuery's .one()
method to ensure the handler only fires once. For example:
$("#someSelector").one("transitionend webkitTransitionEnd oTransitionEnd MSTransitionEnd", function(){ ... });
$("#someSelector").one("animationend webkitAnimationEnd oAnimationEnd MSAnimationEnd", function(){ ... });
Update 2:
jQuery bind()
method has been deprecated, and on()
method is preferred as of jQuery 1.7
. bind()
You can also use off()
method on the callback function to ensure it will be fired only once. Here is an example which is equivalent to using one()
method:
$("#someSelector")
.on("animationend webkitAnimationEnd oAnimationEnd MSAnimationEnd",
function(e){
// do something here
$(this).off(e);
});
References:
.off()
.one()
There is an animationend
Event that can be observed see documentation here,
also for css transition
animations you could use the transitionend
event
There is no need for additional libraries these all work with vanilla JS
document.getElementById("myDIV").addEventListener("transitionend", myEndFunction);
function myEndFunction() {
this.innerHTML = "transition event ended";
}
#myDIV {transition: top 2s; position: relative; top: 0;}
div {background: #ede;cursor: pointer;padding: 20px;}
<div id="myDIV" onclick="this.style.top = '55px';">Click me to start animation.</div>
Another option would be to use the jQuery Transit Framework to handle your CSS3 transitions. The transitions/effects perform well on mobile devices and you don't have to add a single line of messy CSS3 transitions in your CSS file in order to do the animation effects.
Here is an example that will transition an element's opacity to 0 when you click on it and will be removed once the transition is complete:
$("#element").click( function () {
$('#element').transition({ opacity: 0 }, function () { $(this).remove(); });
});
JS Fiddle Demo
For anyone that this might be handy for, here is a jQuery dependent function I had success with for applying a CSS animation via a CSS class, then getting a callback from afterwards. It may not work perfectly since I had it being used in a Backbone.js App, but maybe useful.
var cssAnimate = function(cssClass, callback) {
var self = this;
// Checks if correct animation has ended
var setAnimationListener = function() {
self.one(
"webkitAnimationEnd oanimationend msAnimationEnd animationend",
function(e) {
if(
e.originalEvent.animationName == cssClass &&
e.target === e.currentTarget
) {
callback();
} else {
setAnimationListener();
}
}
);
}
self.addClass(cssClass);
setAnimationListener();
}
I used it kinda like this
cssAnimate.call($("#something"), "fadeIn", function() {
console.log("Animation is complete");
// Remove animation class name?
});
Original idea from http://mikefowler.me/2013/11/18/page-transitions-in-backbone/
And this seems handy: http://api.jqueryui.com/addClass/
Update
After struggling with the above code and other options, I would suggest being very cautious with any listening for CSS animation ends. With multiple animations going on, this can get messy very fast for event listening. I would strongly suggest an animation library like GSAP for every animation, even the small ones.
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