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    Dynamics.js

    Javascript library to create physics-based CSS animations
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    Dynamics.js

    Dynamics.js is a JavaScript library to create physics-based animations

    To see some demos, check out dynamicsjs.com.

    Usage

    Download:

    Include dynamics.js into your page:

    <script src="dynamics.js"></script>
    

    You can animate CSS properties of any DOM element.

    var el = document.getElementById("logo")
    dynamics.animate(el, {
      translateX: 350,
      scale: 2,
      opacity: 0.5
    }, {
      type: dynamics.spring,
      frequency: 200,
      friction: 200,
      duration: 1500
    })
    

    You also can animate SVG properties.

    var path = document.querySelector("path")
    dynamics.animate(path, {
      d: "M0,0 L0,100 L100,50 L0,0 Z",
      fill: "#FF0000",
      rotateZ: 45,
      // rotateCX and rotateCY are the center of the rotation
      rotateCX: 100,
      rotateCY: 100
    }, {
      friction: 800
    })
    

    And any JavaScript object.

    var o = {
      number: 10,
      color: "#FFFFFF",
      string: "10deg",
      array: [ 1, 10 ]
    }
    dynamics.animate(o, {
      number: 20,
      color: "#000000",
      string: "90deg",
      array: [-9, 99 ]
    })
    

    Reference

    dynamics.animate(el, properties, options)

    Animates an element to the properties with the animation options.

    • el is a DOM element, a JavaScript object or an Array of elements
    • properties is an object of the properties/values you want to animate
    • options is an object representing the animation
      • type is the animation type: dynamics.spring, dynamics.easeInOut,... (default: dynamics.easeInOut)
      • frequency, friction, bounciness,... are specific to the animation type you are using
      • duration is in milliseconds (default: 1000)
      • delay is in milliseconds (default: 0)
      • complete (optional) is the completion callback
      • change (optional) is called at every change. Two arguments are passed to the function. function(el, progress)
        • el is the element it's animating
        • progress is the progress of the animation between 0 and 1

    dynamics.stop(el)

    Stops the animation applied on the element

    dynamics.css(el, properties)

    This is applying the CSS properties to your element with the correct browser prefixes.

    • el is a DOM element
    • properties is an object of the CSS properties

    dynamics.setTimeout(fn, delay)

    Dynamics.js has its own setTimeout. The reason is that requestAnimationFrame and setTimeout have different behaviors. In most browsers, requestAnimationFrame will not run in a background tab while setTimeout will. This can cause a lot of problems while using setTimeout along your animations. I suggest you use Dynamics's setTimeout and clearTimeout to handle these scenarios.

    • fn is the callback
    • delay is in milliseconds

    Returns a unique id

    dynamics.clearTimeout(id)

    Clears a timeout that was defined earlier

    • id is the timeout id

    dynamics.toggleSlow()

    Toggle a debug mode to slow down every animations and timeouts. This is useful for development mode to tweak your animation. This can be activated using Shift-Control-D in the browser.

    Dynamics and properties

    dynamics.spring

    • frequency default is 300
    • friction default is 200
    • anticipationSize (optional)
    • anticipationStrength (optional)

    dynamics.bounce

    • frequency default is 300
    • friction default is 200

    dynamics.forceWithGravity and dynamics.gravity

    • bounciness default is 400
    • elasticity default is 200

    dynamics.easeInOut, dynamics.easeIn and dynamics.easeOut

    • friction default is 500

    dynamics.linear

    No properties

    dynamics.bezier

    • points array of points and control points

    The easiest way to output this kind of array is to use the curve creator. Here is an example:

    [{"x":0,"y":0,"cp":[{"x":0.2,"y":0}]},
     {"x":0.5,"y":-0.4,"cp":[{"x":0.4,"y":-0.4},{"x":0.8,"y":-0.4}]},
     {"x":1,"y":1,"cp":[{"x":0.8,"y":1}]}]
    

    Contributing

    Compile: npm run build or npm run build:watch

    Run tests: npm test

    Browser Support

    Working on

    • Safari 7+
    • Firefox 35+
    • Chrome 34+
    • IE10+

    Sylvester

    Some code from Sylvester.js has been used (part of Vector and Matrix).

    License

    The MIT License (MIT)

    Copyright (c) 2015 Michael Villar

    Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

    The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

    THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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