CSS Animations






<!--
main_leaderboard, all: [728,90][970,90][320,50][468,60]
-->



CSS Animations



❮ Previous
Next ❯



CSS Animations


CSS animations allows animation of most HTML elements without using JavaScript or Flash!


CSS



Browser Support for Animations


The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the property.


Numbers followed by -webkit-, -moz-, or -o- specify the first version that worked with a prefix.




























Property
@keyframes 43.0
4.0 -webkit-
10.0 16.0
5.0 -moz-
9.0
4.0 -webkit-
30.0
15.0 -webkit-
12.0 -o-
animation 43.0
4.0 -webkit-
10.0 16.0
5.0 -moz-
9.0
4.0 -webkit-
30.0
15.0 -webkit-
12.0 -o-




What are CSS Animations?


An animation lets an element gradually change from one style to another.


You can change as many CSS properties you want, as many times you want.


To use CSS animation, you must first specify some keyframes for the
animation.


Keyframes hold what styles the element will have at certain times.




The @keyframes Rule


When you specify CSS styles inside the @keyframes
rule, the animation will gradually change from the current style to the new style
at certain times.


To get an animation to work, you must bind the animation to an element.


The following example binds the "example" animation to the <div> element.
The animation will last for 4 seconds, and it will gradually change the
background-color of the <div> element from "red" to "yellow":



Example



/* The animation code */
@keyframes example {
   
from {background-color: red;}
   
to {background-color: yellow;}
}

/* The element to apply the animation to */
div {
    width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
    animation-duration: 4s;
}

Try it Yourself »

Note: The animation-duration property
defines how long time an animation should take to complete. If the animation-duration property is not specified,
no animation will occur, because
the default value is 0s (0 seconds). 


In the example above we have specified when the style will change by using
the keywords "from" and "to" (which represents 0% (start) and 100% (complete)).


It is also possible to use percent. By using percent, you can add as many
style changes as you like.


The following example will change the background-color of the <div>
element when the animation is 25% complete, 50% complete, and again when the animation is 100% complete:



Example



/* The animation code */
@keyframes example
{
   
0%   {background-color: red;}
   
25%  {background-color: yellow;}
   
50%  {background-color: blue;}
   
100% {background-color: green;}
}

/* The element to apply the animation to */
div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
background-color: red;
    animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
}

Try it Yourself »

The following example will change both the background-color and the position of the <div>
element when the animation is 25% complete, 50% complete, and again when the animation is 100% complete:



Example



/* The animation code */
@keyframes example
{
   
0%   {background-color:red; left:0px; top:0px;}
   
25%  {background-color:yellow; left:200px; top:0px;}
   
50%  {background-color:blue; left:200px; top:200px;}
   
75%  {background-color:green; left:0px; top:200px;}
   
100% {background-color:red; left:0px; top:0px;}
}

/* The element to apply the animation to */
div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
}

Try it Yourself »






<!--
mid_content, all: [300,250][336,280][728,90][970,250][970,90][320,50][468,60]
-->





Delay an Animation


The animation-delay property specifies a delay for the start of an animation.


The following example has a 2 seconds delay before starting the animation:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-delay: 2s;
}

Try it Yourself »


Negative values are also allowed. If using negative values, the animation
will start as if it had already been playing for N seconds.


In the following example, the animation will start as if it had already been
playing for 2 seconds:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-delay: -2s;
}

Try it Yourself »



Set How Many Times an Animation Should Run


The animation-iteration-count property specifies the number of times an animation should run.


The following example will run the animation 3 times before it stops:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-iteration-count: 3;
}

Try it Yourself »

The following example uses the value "infinite" to make the animation
continue for ever:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-iteration-count:
infinite;
}

Try it Yourself »



Run Animation in Reverse Direction or Alternate Cycles


The animation-direction property specifies
whether an animation should be played forwards, backwards or in alternate
cycles.


The animation-direction property can have the following values:




  • normal - The animation is played as normal
    (forwards). This is default


  • reverse - The animation is played in
    reverse direction (backwards)


  • alternate - The animation is played
    forwards first, then backwards


  • alternate-reverse - The animation is played
    backwards first, then forwards


The following example will run the animation in reverse direction (backwards):



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-direction:
reverse;
}

Try it Yourself »

The following example uses the value "alternate" to make the animation
run forwards first, then backwards:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-iteration-count: 2;
    animation-direction:
alternate;
}

Try it Yourself »


The following example uses the value "alternate-reverse" to make the animation
run backwards first, then forwards:



Example



div {
   
width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
position: relative;
    background-color: red;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 4s;
    animation-iteration-count: 2;
    animation-direction:
alternate-reverse;
}

Try it Yourself »



Specify the Speed Curve of the Animation


The animation-timing-function property specifies the speed curve of the
animation.


The animation-timing-function property can have the following values:




  • ease - Specifies an animation with a slow start, then fast, then end slowly (this is default)


  • linear - Specifies an animation with the same speed from start to end


  • ease-in - Specifies an animation with a slow start


  • ease-out - Specifies an animation with a slow end


  • ease-in-out - Specifies an animation with a slow start and end


  • cubic-bezier(n,n,n,n) - Lets you define your own values in a cubic-bezier function


The following example shows the some of the different speed curves that can be used:



Example



#div1 {animation-timing-function: linear;}
#div2
{animation-timing-function: ease;}
#div3 {animation-timing-function:
ease-in;}
#div4 {animation-timing-function: ease-out;}
#div5
{animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;}

Try it Yourself »



Specify the fill-mode For an Animation


CSS animations do not affect an element before the first keyframe is played
or after the last keyframe is played. The animation-fill-mode property can
override this behavior.


The animation-fill-mode property specifies a
style for the target element when the animation is not playing (before it
starts, after it ends, or both).


The animation-fill-mode property can have the following values:




  • none - Default value. Animation will not
    apply any styles to the element before or after it is executing


  • forwards - The element will retain the
    style values that is set by the last keyframe (depends on animation-direction
    and animation-iteration-count)


  • backwards - The element will get the style
    values that is set by the first keyframe (depends on animation-direction), and
    retain this during the animation-delay period


  • both - The animation will follow the rules
    for both forwards and backwards, extending the animation properties in both
    directions


The following example lets the <div> element retain the style values from the
last keyframe when the animation ends:



Example



div {
    width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
background: red;
    position: relative;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 3s;
    animation-fill-mode: forwards;
}

Try it Yourself »


The following example lets the <div> element get the style values set by the
first keyframe before the animation starts (during the animation-delay period):



Example



div {
    width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
background: red;
    position: relative;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 3s;
   
animation-delay: 2s;
    animation-fill-mode: backwards;
}

Try it Yourself »


The following example lets the <div> element get the style values set
by the first keyframe before the animation starts, and retain the style values
from the last keyframe when the animation ends:



Example



div {
    width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
   
background: red;
    position: relative;
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 3s;
   
animation-delay: 2s;
    animation-fill-mode: both;
}

Try it Yourself »



Animation Shorthand Property


The example below uses six of the animation properties:



Example



div
{
   
animation-name: example;
   
animation-duration: 5s;
   
animation-timing-function: linear;
   
animation-delay: 2s;
   
animation-iteration-count: infinite;
   
animation-direction: alternate;
}

Try it Yourself »

The same animation effect as above can be achieved by using the shorthand
animation property:



Example



div
{
    animation: example 5s linear 2s infinite alternate;
}

Try it Yourself »



Test Yourself with Exercises!



Exercise 1 » 
Exercise 2 » 
Exercise 3 » 
Exercise 4 » 
Exercise 5 » 
Exercise 6 »




CSS Animation Properties


The following table lists the @keyframes rule and all the CSS animation properties:















































Property Description
@keyframes Specifies the animation code
animation A shorthand property for setting all the animation properties
animation-delay Specifies a delay for the start of an animation
animation-direction Specifies whether an animation should be played forwards, backwards or
in alternate cycles
animation-duration Specifies how long time an animation should take to complete one cycle
animation-fill-mode Specifies a style for the element when the animation is not playing
(before it starts, after it ends, or both)
animation-iteration-count Specifies the number of times an animation should be played
animation-name Specifies the name of the @keyframes animation
animation-play-state Specifies whether the animation is running or paused
animation-timing-function Specifies the speed curve of the animation



❮ Previous
Next ❯

Popular posts from this blog

Colors HSL

Google Hardware Icons

SVG Filters