Friday, November 16, 2018

CSS Transitions

CSS Transitions

CSS transitions allows you to change property values smoothly (from one value to another), over a given duration.
Example: Mouse over the element below to see a CSS transition effect:
CSS


Browser Support for Transitions

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.

How to Use CSS Transitions?

To create a transition effect, you must specify two things:
  • the CSS property you want to add an effect to
  • the duration of the effect
Note: If the duration part is not specified, the transition will have no effect, because the default value is 0.
The following example shows a 100px * 100px red <div> element. The <div> element has also specified a transition effect for the width property, with a duration of 2 seconds:

div {
    width: 100px;
    height: 100px;
    background: red;
    -webkit-transition: width 2s; /* Safari */
    transition: width 2s;
}

The transition effect will start when the specified CSS property (width) changes value.
Now, let us specify a new value for the width property when a user mouses over the <div> element:

div:hover {
    width: 300px;
}

Change Several Property Values

The following example adds a transition effect for both the width and height property, with a duration of 2 seconds for the width and 4 seconds for the height:

div {
    -webkit-transition: width 2s, height 4s; /* Safari */
    transition: width 2s, height 4s;
}

Specify the Speed Curve of the Transition

The transition-timing-function property specifies the speed curve of the transition effect.
The transition-timing-function property can have the following values:
  • ease - specifies a transition effect with a slow start, then fast, then end slowly (this is default)
  • linear - specifies a transition effect with the same speed from start to end
  • ease-in - specifies a transition effect with a slow start
  • ease-out - specifies a transition effect with a slow end
  • ease-in-out - specifies a transition effect 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 {transition-timing-function: linear;}
#div2 {transition-timing-function: ease;}
#div3 {transition-timing-function: ease-in;}
#div4 {transition-timing-function: ease-out;}
#div5 {transition-timing-function: ease-in-out;}

Delay the Transition Effect

The transition-delay property specifies a delay (in seconds) for the transition effect.
The following example has a 1 second delay before starting:

div {
    -webkit-transition-delay: 1s; /* Safari */
    transition-delay: 1s;
}

Transition + Transformation

The following example also adds a transformation to the transition effect:

div {
    -webkit-transition: width 2s, height 2s, -webkit-transform 2s; /* Safari */
    transition: width 2s, height 2s, transform 2s;
}


































































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